Popular Nigerian doctor based in the United States, Prof. Maurice Iwu, has claimed that Garcinia kola, better known as Bitter Kola in West Africa, may be a possible drug against the deadly Ebola virus.
An Inquirer Washington Bureau reported Iwu, who made this discovery, as saying that the much needed cure could be sourced from the same African forests where the disease was identified.
Iwu is a doctor with a combination of folk-remedy
expertise and a doctorate in Western pharmacology. He is also the Executive
Director of the Bioresources Development and Conservation Programme, and a
consultant at Walter Reed Army Hospital in suburban Washington.
Surprisingly, one of the top infectious-disease
laboratories in the US was said to have tested the fruit, and said that Bitter
Kola passed the crucial and difficult first hurdle...
A virus expert who heads the effort at the US Army
Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases in Fort Detrick, Maryland, to
find antiviral drugs to fight exotic diseases, John Huggins, said, “It
certainly is a promising compound. So far, it’s made it through all the gates
that it has been sent through.”
But there are many more tests to be done, first on
mice in the next few months, and eventually primates, before it would be used
on people, Huggins said. Only one of 20 prospective drugs that pass the
test-tube test makes it onto the market.
A Professor of Microbiology at Washington
University in St. Louis, Lawrence Gelb, said, “I would be – and am – very
sceptical. But you can’t be an outright cynic; eventually some (prospective
drug) works.”
The reason bitter kola may have an edge over other
types of drugs that work in lab tests is that many drugs often prove toxic to
people and animals in subsequent testing, whereas bitter cola has been used for
centuries, and has gotten federal approval as a safe dietary supplement, Head
of Applied Research at Missouri Botanical Garden, who has tried to develop
plants as medicine in the past, Jim Miller, said.
The deadly Ebola Virus has so far killed more than
600 victims since its outbreak in Guinea, with Nigeria’s only recorded death
being that of Liberian consultant, Patrick Sawyer, who died in Lagos last week.

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