| South
Americans call it the "drink of the gods".
May
be helpful in alleviating symptoms as follows:
-
High
level nutrition ("liquid vegetable" - antioxidants,
vitamins, minerals, amino acids)
-
Balancing
the nervous system
-
Fatigue
and Stress
-
Sexual
tonic
-
Headaches
-
Circulatory
tonic
-
Detoxification
-
Curb
appetite, balance blood sugar and help with weight-loss
-
Healthy
alternative to tea and coffee
(please
read this important notice concerning supplement medical claims)
Yerba maté is native to the rain
forests of Paraguay, Argentina, and Brazil. The people of South
America have used yerba maté as a household cure for hundreds of
years. Thought to ensure health, vitality, and longevity, the sacred
beverage has been used to treat illness and disease, fight fatigue,
and detoxify the body. The tea is considered Paraguay's national
drink, and gauchos, or South American cowboys, consume maté as their
"liquid vegetable" in a diet that otherwise consists mainly
of meat.
Yerba maté contains antioxidants, more
than fifteen amino acids, and twenty-four vitamins and minerals.
Research shows that maté contains 196 active compounds, compared with
the 144 found in green tea. Maté is high in pantothenic acid, a B
vitamin that plays a vital role in metabolism and energy production,
and contains protein, carotene, vitamins A, C, E, B complex, calcium,
iron, potassium, manganese, magnesium, choline, as well as other
nutrients.
A 1995 study from the Pasteur Institute
found maté to be a more potent antioxidant than vitamin C, and a
test-tube study published by the University of Montreal's Department
of Anatomy in 1995 shows that it can inhibit the oxidation of
low-density lipoprotein, the carrier of bad cholesterol.
The stimulant in maté is mateine, one
of a group of xanthines that includes caffeine and theobromine, a
stimulant found in tea and chocolate products. Although mateine has a
chemical structure similar to caffeine, it stimulates the body
differently. Unlike caffeine, mateine doesn't cause nervousness or
jitters; instead, it is said to balance the body, calming an excited
nervous system and rejuvenating a fatigued one.
Clinical studies have shown that
caffeine-sensitive individuals can drink maté with no adverse
reactions, according to the book Herbal Tonic Therapies (Keats,
1993) by Daniel Mowrey, Ph.D., president of the American Phytotherapy
Research Laboratory in Salt Lake City.
But Mowrey, who has studied maté for
fifteen years and drinks the tea daily, says the plant's nutritional
value is more important than its mateine/stimulant qualities.
"This plant is a powerhouse of
nutrition, especially pantothenic acid," Mowrey says.
Acting as a tonic, maté may provide
the body with energy through nutrition, rather than through stimulant
properties, he says. Tonic herbs are defined as those that balance a
stressed body, are free of side effects, and are non-addictive.
A Swiss study on humans indicated yerba
maté could be beneficial as a weight-loss aid. They noticed a
thermogenic effect, indicating a rise in the proportion of fat
oxidized.
In another study, yerba maté was given
in combination with the plants guarana and damiana. This combination
prolonged gastric emptying (which made the subjects feel
"fuller" longer) and reduced body weight.
Clinical studies indicate maté leaf
inhibits an enzyme involved in inflammatiion and inflammatory
diseases.
A U.S. patent issued in 2002 stated
that yerba maté inhibits monoamine oxidase (MAO) activity by 40-50% in
vitro (see contra-indications in yellow box
above), reporting that it might be useful for a variety of such
disorders as "depression, disorders of attention and focus, mood
and emotional disorders, Parkinson's disease, hypertension, substance
abuse, eating disorders, withdrawal syndromes and the cessation of
smoking."
References:
- Blumenthal, M., et al. The Complete German Commission E
Monographs: Therapeutic Guide to Herbal Medicines. 1st ed.
Integrative Medicine Communications. Newton, MA, 1998.
- Alikaridis, F. “Natural constituents of Ilex species.”
J. Ethnopharmacol. 1987; 20(2): 121–44.
- Sanz, M. D., T. “Mineral elements in maté herb (Ilex
paraguariensis St. H.).” Arch. Latinoam. Nutr. 1991;
41(3): 441–54.
- Samuelsson, Gunnar. Drugs of Natural Origin: A Textbook of
Pharmacognosy, 3rd ed. Swedish Pharmaceutical Press.
Stockholm, Sweden, 1992.
- Duke, J. A. Handbook of Phytochemical Constituents of GRAS
Herbs and Other Economic Plants. CRC Press. Boca Raton, FL,
1992.
- Vasquez, A., et al. “Studies on maté drinking.” J.
Ethnopharmacol. 1986; 18: 267–72.
- Collomp, K., et al. “Effects of salbutamol and caffeine
ingestion on exercise metabolism and performance.” Int. J.
Sports Med. 2002; 23(8): 549–54.
- Lieberman, H. R., et al. “Effects of caffeine, sleep loss, and
stress on cognitive performance and mood during U.S. Navy SEAL
training." Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2002; 164(3):
250–61.
- National Toxicology Program. “NTP toxicology and
carcinogenesis studies of theophylline (CAS No. 58-55-9) in F344/N
rats and B6C3F1 mice (feed and gavage studies).” Natl.
Toxicol. Program Tech. Rep. Ser. 1998; 478: 1–326.
- Martinet, A., et al. “Thermogenic effects of commercially
available plant preparations aimed at treating human obesity.” Phytomedicine
1999; 6(4): 231–38.
- Anderson, T., et al. “Weight loss and delayed gastric emptying
following a South American herbal preparation in overweight
patients.” J. Hum. Nutr. Diet. 2001; 14(3): 243–50.
- Matsunaga, K., et al. “Excitatory and inhibitory effects of
Paraguayan medicinal plants Equisetum giganteum, Acanthospermum
australe, Allopylus edulis and Cordia salicifolia on
contraction of rabbit aorta and guinea-pig left atrium.” Natural
Med. 1997; 51(5): 478–481.
- Gorzalczany, S., et al. “Choleretic effect and intestinal
propulsion of ‘maté’ (Ilex paraguariensis) and its
substitutes of adulterants.” J. Ethnopharmacol. 2001;
75(2–3): 291–94.
- Williams, J. R., et al. “Treating depression with alcohol
extracts of tobacco.” U.S. patent no. 6,350,479; 2002.
- Filip, R., et al. “Antioxidant activity of Ilex
paraguariensis and related species.” Nutr. Res. 2000;
20(10): 1437–46.
- Schinella, G. R., et al. “Antioxidant effects of an aqueous
extract of Ilex paraguariensis.” Biochem. Biophys.
Res. Commun. 2000; 269(2): 357–60.
- Actis-Goretta, L., et al. “Comparative study on the
antioxidant capacity of wines and other plant-derived
beverages.” Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 2002; 957: 279–83.
- Gugliucci, A. “Antioxidant effects of Ilex paraguariensis:
induction of decreased oxidability of human LDL in vivo.”
Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 1996; 224(2): 338–44.
- Gugliucci, A. “Low-density lipoprotein oxidation is inhibited
by extracts of Ilex paraguariensis.” Biochem. Mol.
Biol. Int. 1995; 35(1): 47–56.
- Kalousova, M., et al. “Advanced glycation end-products and
advanced oxidation protein products in patients with diabetes
mellitus.” Physiol. Res. 2002; 51(6): 597–604.
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