Ayurvedic Herbs Treat Type 2 Diabetes

Salacia chinensis part of anti-diabetes formula.
Ayurveda is the oldest medical healing art still in practice. And Ayurvedic doctors have been treating blood sugar-related conditions for thousands of years. Now we find clinical research confirms the use of an Ayurvedic herbal formula to treat type-2 diabetes.

Uncontrolled type 2 diabetes treated

Uncontrolled type 2 diabetes has confounded conventional medicine as conventional therapies often fail to control blood sugar levels and regulate insulin production. Could Ayurveda hold the key to treatment for these difficult cases?

A recent clinical study seems to indicate the answer is yes. Researchers from India’s SKSS Ayurvedic College conducted a clinical study of 67 patients with type 2 diabetes. Of these, 36 of the patients were recently diagnosed, and 31 patients had chronic type 2 diabetes.

The 31 chronic diabetes patients were taking conventional medications that were unable to adequately control their symptoms. The 36 newly-diagnosed patients were not taking medication at the time of the study.

Saptarangyadi Ghanavati remedy given

The researchers then gave each patient of both groups 200 milligrams of an ancient Ayurvedic formula called Saptarangyadi Ghanavati three times a day following each meal. The patients who were taking conventional medication continued their treatment along with taking the herbal formula.

The researchers randomly selected six of the patients from each group and tested the patients’ blood insulin levels following meals and during fasting.

The researchers found that the medication-taking patients had significantly increased first phase insulin levels compared to before treatment with the herbal combination. Among the newly diagnosed group, glycosylated hemoglobin levels - HbA1c - were significantly decreased. Fasting blood sugar and post-meal blood sugar levels were significantly decreased in both groups.

What is Saptarangyadi Ghanavati?

The ancient Saptarangyadi Ayurvedic formula consists of 82 herbs that have gone through a concentration step and combined into a vati – or tablet. The ancient Charak Samhita text indicates the formula is effective for the treatment of blood sugar issues, constipation, arthritis and other inflammatory issues.

Ayurvedic clinical documentation has shown that the formula can also be useful in the treatment of Type 1 diabetes.

One of the primary herbs in this formula is Salacia chinensis, also called Salacia. Extracts of Salacia chinensis have been shown to significantly reduce cholesterol, triglycerides and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) levels in rats. Another study found the relative Salacia oblonga herb able to dramatically improve diabetes among rats.

Diabetes needs a new approach

The World Health Organization has estimated that 180 million people around the world have diabetes, and this has been suggested to likely double by the year 2030.

Perhaps Ayurveda should be considered more closely for diabetes treatment. With an ongoing clinical history of over 5,000 years without dangerous side effects or polluting the environment with its medicines, Ayurveda offers a low-cost treatment option provided by nature and has been proven safe in centuries of use.

It doesn't need to be patented or restricted by regulation because it is a natural herb that grows out of the ground.


REFERENCES:


Singh KS, Chandola H, Kaur M, Ravishankar B. Evaluation of Saptarangyadi Ghanavati in the management of Apathyanimittaja Prameha w.s.r. to type-2 diabetes mellitus. Ayu. 2012 Jul;33(3):368-73.

Sikarwar MS, Patil MB. Antihyperlipidemic activity of Salacia chinensis root extracts in triton-induced and atherogenic diet-induced hyperlipidemic rats. Indian J Pharmacol. 2012 Jan;44(1):88-92.

Ministry of Health. Pharmacopoeia of India. Government of India, 1982

Bhat BM, C V R, D'Souza V, Manjrekar PA. Antidiabetic and hypolipidemic effect of salacia oblonga in streptozotocin induced diabetic rats. J Clin Diagn Res. 2012 Dec;6(10):1685-7. doi: 10.7860/JCDR/2012/4728.2644.