This research is in mice, but if it proves effective
for humans, it will be a great help.

       "We were stunned by how different the berry is
from the root in terms of its chemical profile and by
how effective it is in correcting the multiple
metabolic abnormalities associated with diabetes,"
Yuan says.
       In fact, the berry is more effective than the
root in multiple ways, he says, with an extract made
from its pulp normalizing blood sugar and lowering
cholesterol levels in fat mice. 
       Additionally, obese mice given the extract ate
less and exercised more - the payoff being weight
loss, he says. And if the image of slimmer, trimmer
mice doesn't do it for you, Yuan is quick to add that
he expects the results to translate to humans.   
          "There's some anti-diabetes effect with the
root, but this is much stronger," Yuan says. "And
ginseng root doesn't change body weight at all."
 
http://www.msnbc.com/news/758205.asp

(MSN article, so advertisements present)




Looks like the whole thing is an advertisement. They probably already have a warehouse 
full of Ginseng berry extract.

Kevin T.
Garbage in garbage out
_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to