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Guarana and long-haul
flights and jet leg
How long-haul flyers benefit from the energy-seed
of the Amazon.
Guarana, with its world-wide
reputation as a natural stimulant for the fast-living party-set, is
back again. This ancient energy-giving food is not only great when vitality
is low and emotional tone is depressed, but it has helped many through
the murky burden of jet-lag.
“New research
is showing important benefits in another area connected with the dangers
inherent in long-haul flights”,
says Graeme Lewis of Rio Health, the British pioneers of the Energy
Seed of the Amazon. “It has to do with blood clots and the dangers of
DVT.”
At the University of
Cincinnatti in the United States a research project on Guarana found
that Guarana has the ability to ‘thin the blood’, much as daily aspirin
does, but without the deleterious side effects for the stomach and intestinal
tract. Graeme Lewis again: “Platelet aggregation is the proper term
for the clots that can occur not only in older people, but in other
groups — for instance passengers on long haul flights who are at risk
of DVT (Deep Vein Thrombosis). Guarana not only helps to prevent the
aggregation of blood corpuscles, but also can de-aggregate groups that
have already formed.”
These American findings
became the basis of a US patent, and they confirm an earlier report
by a doctor at the Copenhagen State Hospital, who gave Guarana to hospital
staff — particularly night staff — and not only measured higher energy
levels throughout duty
periods but also lower levels of fibrinogen, fibrous matter that can
form in the blood and which is associated with stress and stroke.
Guarana is a small
nut-like seed that grows naturally high in the canopy of the Rainforest
on lengthy vines that reach up from the forest floor. Nowadays the vine
has been hybridised to a straggly bush and it is grown in plantations
along the lower reaches of the Amazon, and down to the coasts of Bahia.
The actives in the
seed are a combination of caffeine, theobromine and theophylline, and
these are associated with tannins and saponins — Paullinia cupana is
a member of the soapwood family, the Sapindaceae. On a per gram basis
the caffeine level in Guarana is higher than in either tea or coffee,
which has led to a widespread denigration of and distrust of Guarana.
This is unfounded. While the weight for weight comparison appears striking,
in fact the daily usage of Guarana at 1 gram (giving 35mg of caffeine)
is considerably lower than the amount in one cup of tea (usually around
70mg) or one cup of coffee, which can present the body with up to 200mg
of caffeine. That is not all. Both coffee and tea are water soluble,
which means that the actives enter the bloodstream extremely fast causing,
in some cases, hot sweats, tremors and palpitations. Not so with Guarana,
which is rich in oily saponins. These prevent the quick take-up of the
active ingredients, and require the body to digest the molecules in
a form of natural time-release.
“The new Guarana harvest
has been brought in on the plantations along the Amazon River,” says
Graeme Lewis. “and the world is looking again at Guarana, not just as
a superb energy tonic, but also for its use in the potentially dangerous
conditions of intercontinental jet travel. Thousands of Brazilians take
Guarana onto the aircraft for jet-lag, and now they have another reason.”
Rio Amazon Guarana
is the acknowledged leader in the field, and a new generation is turning
on to Guarana again. Drivers, athletes, busy mums, students, and the
retired are returning to this simple, but multi-facetted
herb and taking advantage of its many benefits.
Rio Amazon Guarana is available as capsules, tablets or pure seed
powder (suitable for vegetarians), and also in the dynamic BUZZ GUM,
a chewing gum that gives you a great lift, and which is ideal for drivers.There
is a fabulous and delicious fruit and herbal drink called Guarana Breeze,
and a wicked alcoholic elixir that offers Guarana seed powder macerated
in Mistilla wine with wheatgerm oil.
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