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Should anyone have told me that within three
years of my meeting with a mother, whose son's eczema had totally cleared
with an Aloe Vera and Bee Propolis cream, that I would be researching
its medicinal uses full time, I would have laughed. But it happened.
That meeting was to totally change my medical
perspective and in fact to change my life.
About the Author
Dr Peter Atherton is currently a research Fellow
at Oxford University studying the medicinal effects of Aloe Vera.
His recent book The Essential Aloe Vera can be purchased
from Mill Enterprises, Thornborough Mill, Buckingham, MK18 2ED, at a price of £6.00 incl.
p&p.

Aloe Vera leaf

The components of Aloe Vera
can be divided into the following groups:
1. Vitamins
It
is rich in all vitamins excluding Vitamin D, especially the antioxidant Vitamins A
(beta-carotene), C and E and even contains a trace of Vit. B12, one of the very few plant
sources of this vitamin. This is important for vegetarians and vegans.
2. Enzymes
Several
different types of these biochemical catalysts when taken orally aid digestion by breaking
down fat and sugars.
One in particular, Bradykinase, helps to reduce excessive
inflammation when applied to the skin topically and therefore reduces pain, whereas others
help digest any dead tissues in wounds. Lipases and proteases which break down foods and
aid digestion are present.
3. Minerals
Calcium,
Sodium Potassium, Manganese, Magnesium, Copper, Zinc, Chromium and the anti-oxidant
Selenium.
Although minerals and trace elements are only needed in
very small quantities, they are essential for the proper functioning of various enzyme
systems in different metabolic pathways.
4. Sugars
These
are derived from the mucilage layer of the plant which surrounds the inner gel. and are
known as mucopolysaccharides, which enhance the immune system and help to detoxify. Aloe
Vera contains both mono and polysaccharides, but the most important are the long chain
sugars involving glucose and mannose or the gluco-mannans which I have already referred
to. These sugars are ingested whole from the gut, not broken down like other sugars, and
appear in the bloodstream in exactly the same form. This process is known as pinocytosis.
Once in the blood stream they are able to exert their immuno-regulating effect. Some of
these polysaccharides are not absorbed but stick to certain cells lining the gut and form
a barrier preventing absorption of unwanted material so helping to prevent a
"leaking" gut syndrome. In topical preparations the sugars are also the main
moisturisers.
5. Anthraquinones
There
are twelve of these Phenolic compounds which are found exclusively in the plant sap. In
small quantities, when they do not exert their purgative effect, they aid absorption from
the gastro-intestinal tract and have anti-microbial and pain killing effects. In some
commercial health drinks, the anthraquinones are removed because of the fear of producing
abdominal pain or diarrhoea, but I feel that they are actually beneficial in small
amounts. The important ones, Aloin and Emodin, act as painkillers. They also function as
anti-bacterials and anti-virals.
6. Lignin
This
in itself is an inert substance but when included in topical preparations it endows Aloe
Vera with a singular penetrative effect so the other ingredients are absorbed into the
skin.
7. Saponins
These
soapy substances form about 3% of the Aloe Vera gel and are capable of cleansing, having
antiseptic properties. These act powerfully as anti-microbials against bacteria, viruses,
fungi and yeasts.
8. Fatty Acids
Cholesterol,
Campesterol, b. Sisosterol and Lupeol.
These four plant steroids are important anti-inflammatory
agents.
9. Salicylic acid
An
aspirin-like compound possessing anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial properties.
10. Amino Acids
The
body needs 22 amino acids the gel provides 20 of these. More importantly, it
provides 7 out of the 8 essential amino acids which the body cannot synthesise.
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It was about three years ago, whilst
I was a full time General Practitioner, a job that I had been doing both
at home and abroad for twenty eight years, that I came across Aloe Vera.
I had vaguely heard of it as an addition to various
cosmetic products, but I was completely ignorant of its origin and unconcerned
about its actions. I was certainly unaware of its fabled medicinal properties
and as a strictly conventional physician I had no interest in any form
of complementary or alternative medicine. In fact, I was almost dismissive
of claims made by alternative practitioners and felt they largely achieved
their 'cures' by way of a placebo effect. So I left it to others to indulge
in acupuncture and applied kinesiology what was that anyway?
Should anyone have told me that within three
years of my meeting with a mother, whose son's eczema had totally cleared
with an Aloe Vera and Bee Propolis cream, that I would be researching
its medicinal uses full time, I would have laughed. But it happened. That
meeting was to totally change my medical perspective and in fact to change
my life.
At first I couldn't accept that Aloe Vera combined
with Bee Propolis (the sticky resinous substance collected from various
tree barks and buds by bees with which they line their hives creating
a sterile environment) could suppress this atopic or juvenile eczema,
where all my moisturisers and steroid creams had not. It was even more
upsetting because my special interest in Medicine was dermatology and
I thought I knew a bit about it. What was in this stuff? Why did it work?
I was already sure it wasn't a placebo effect so my search for a scientific
explanation began.

Aloe Vera plant
I began this search by reading
everything I could about the plant's history, for by now I at least realised
that it was a succulent (Liliaciae Sub species aloinae), a member of the
lily and onion family, also related to garlic and asparagus, of which
there are more than three hundred varieties but of which only a few had
medicinal properties. It is generally accepted that the most potent was
Aloe Vera Barbadensis Miller.
The name Aloe Vera or True Aloe probably stems
from the Arabic word Alloeh meaning "Shining bitter substance".
We still refer to "bitter aloes" describing the laxative drug
still listed in the U.S. Pharmacopoeia today. This drug was made from
the sap of the plant found under the hard green rind. It contains mainly
aloin, chemically an anthraquinone, which has been known since ancient
times to possess very powerful purgative action if used neat. Bearing
in mind that severe constipation was a very serious problem in those days,
it is not surprising that this extract of Aloe Vera was highly prized
just for this action.
I discovered that Aloe Vera has been used by
mankind for several thousand years and over the centuries there have been
many references to Aloe Vera in many cultures: from the ancient Egyptians,
Greeks and Romans, as well as in the literature of the Indian and Chinese
peoples. Several famous physicians such as Pliny the Elder, Dioscorides
and Galen, the father of modern medicine, who first described how the
circulation worked, all used Aloe Vera as part of their therapeutic armoury.
There are also many romantic tales about it,
suggesting that the Egyptian queens Nerfertiti and Cleopatra used it as
part of their regular beauty regimes. Supposedly Alexander the Great in
333 B.C. was persuaded by his mentor Aristotle to capture the Island of
Socotra in the Indian Ocean for its famed Aloe supplies, needed to treat
his wounded soldiers. Aloe is also mentioned in the Bible several times,
for example, in St. John's Gospel, but this was in fact, Lignin Aloe,
not Aloe Vera. Lignin Aloe is a tree whose scented bark was used for incense
as well as an ingredient used in embalming the dead.
The true Aloe has been endowed with such marvellous
properties that over the years around the world it has been given many
wonderful names such as Burn Plant, Medicine Plant, Wand of Heaven and
Plant of Life.
The first reference to Aloe Vera in English was
a translation by John Goodyew in A.D. 1655 of Dioscorides' Medical treatise
De materia Medica which he wrote in AD 70-90.
Traders first brought Aloe Vera to London in
1693 and by 1843 considerable amounts were being imported to be made up
into medicines. Throughout the 18th and 19th centuries it remained one
of the main popular prescribed and over-the-counter medicines.
Whilst discovering the fascinating history of
Aloe Vera I was also experimenting with some Aloe products on myself and
my family, and getting some remarkable results. Aloe Vera can be drunk
as a nutritional health drink or tonic or it can be applied topically
to the skin and scalp as creams and lotions. Like most natural remedies,
Aloe works best when used fresh from the plant but it oxidises rapidly
when cut and exposed to the air. Unfortunately, it will only grow in warm,
fertile areas and its main enemy is frost, so here it must be grown indoors.
If one has access to a mature plant then the best way is to cut a leaf
off it, fillet out the inner leaf gel and use it directly, but for most
of us it is necessary to buy a preserved product. I think the product
should remain as near to the natural plant as possible to achieve the
correct balance of ingredients and be interfered with as little as possible,
so I do not favour products that have either been heat treated, filtered,
concentrated or powdered.
When using it at home I saw the phenomenal effect
it had as a first aid burn treatment my wife often burns her hands
on the Aga oven because the glove is never where it should be. She was
very skeptical at first, but was truly amazed by the rapid pain relief,
the speed of healing and the healing without a scar. She never even attempts
to find the glove now!! No wonder it is called the burn plant!
I had also discovered that the first really scientific
research into Aloe Vera was carried out in the 1930s and 1940s into its
effect on X-Ray burns.(1-9)
I started drinking the gel daily and after about
ten days noticed that chronic catarrh, a legacy of smoking for 20 years,
had cleared up and more importantly I just generally felt much better.
Reassured by experience and my reading which
confirmed Aloe Vera as a tried, tested, extremely safe and non toxic remedy,
I was prepared to try it out on some selected patients in my practice.
My investigation at that time had shown that
Aloe Vera seemed to work in two definite areas, firstly on damaged epithelial
tissue and secondly on the immune system. An epithelium is an anatomical
term that is defined as "a layer of cells that covers the surface
of the body or lines a cavity that connects with it". So the skin,
the largest of our body organs, is the largest epithelial tissue. It connects
through the mouth with the lining of the gastro-intestinal tract as well
as the lining of the nose and sinuses, the lining of the lungs and the
genital tract. It is not surprising, therefore, that Aloe Vera will speed
up the healing of a burn or some damaged eczematous skin just as well
as it will heal a mouth ulcer or even a stomach ulcer or a problem of
the bowel lining all epithelial tissue. It is certainly not a panacea
for all ills as, unfortunately, some people suggest. This action on surfaces
and membranes rather than on solid organs defines its uses, and where
it is appropriate its effect is often dramatic.
Conditions which are caused by a disordered immune
system such as asthma and some forms of arthritis also seem to benefit
from Aloe Vera. Good results are even reported by sufferers from that
ill understood condition M.E. (Myalgic encephalo- myelitis) or Post Viral
Fatigue Syndrome. Evidence for improvement in this syndrome is purely
anecdotal but recently an equine vet, Peter Green, carried out a trial
and showed that Aloe Vera had a remarkable effect in horses suffering
from a similar post viral debility. He got a tremendous response and actually
was able to demonstrate that the white blood cell count, which is lowered
by the illness to almost fatal levels, had returned to normal after Aloe
Vera treatment. Unfortunately, there is no similar way of measuring the
effect in humans as there is no demonstrable change in the blood picture.
In the U.S., Carrington Laboratories have isolated
one of the sugars from Aloe Vera, a long chain polysaccharide which is
being trialed with AIDS patients. It has been shown in laboratory testing
to be an immunomodulator, i.e. it can both enhance the immune response
very beneficial to AIDS sufferers whose response is very poor;
but it would also seem to be able to slow down or retard the response
where it is too much. A common example of such a response would be in
hayfever, where there is an over-reaction to grass pollens. Carrington
Laboratories' product "Carrisyn" is already licensed for the
treatment of a viral illness in cats, a form of feline leukaemia. The
continuing development of this drug for human use is very exciting.
The response of the immune system to attack by
either bacteria, viruses or cancer cells is extremely complex, but part
of it involves a system of messenger substances such as the interleukins
and tumour necrosis factor called Cytokines. Cytokines activate cells
such as neutrophils and lymphocytes to attack their targets. The attack
may take the form of antibody production of direct engulfment by the cell
phagocytosis. By orchestrating the response the cytokine system
can both enhance and retard activity, hence the polysaccharides in Aloe
Vera which affect this system are referred to as immunomodulators.
In order to understand the various ways in which
Aloe Vera may work it is necessary to look at the constituents of the
plant. There are over 75 known ingredients and they are all contained
in about 1% of the plant, the rest being water, so they are obviously
present only in small amounts. Their disproportionate action is thought
to arise from the synergistic effect of these substances, i.e. they can
be likened to working together as a team so that the total effect is greater
than would be expected from the combined individual effect of each substance.
When deciding which patients to select for a
small pilot study of Aloe Vera in my own practice, my criteria were that
a) they either had a disorder of an epithelial tissue, such as a skin
problem, or b) an immune problem such as rheumatoid arthritis. I chose
patients with chronic conditions that had not responded well to conventional
therapy. At my suggestion most were keen to try it, and overall I was
immensely impressed to find that I achieved roughly a 70% success rate
across the board. Given that I was dealing with some of my most difficult
cases I was tremendously encouraged. With the skin conditions I got my
best results on atopic or juvenile eczema and confirmed what I had been
told by the mother who first introduced me to it. The Aloe Propolis cream
produced both a moisturising, anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial response.
This resulted in softer, less itchy skin and reduced infection. It is
infection that usually causes these children's eczema to flare up so I
think the addition of bee propolis, a sort of natural antibiotic, is most
useful.
Two patients with chronically itchy skin (urticaria)
settled down and several adult patients with acne rosacea where the facial
skin is constantly red with pustule formation, also noticed a marked improvement
with a reduction in their high colour by applying an Aloe Vera gel preparation
twice a day. One particular elderly lady in her eighties who developed
a traumatic ulcer on her skin was delighted to see it healing virtually
on a daily basis over a few weeks, and once healed it was impossible to
see where it had been as there was no scarring, a regular feature of Aloe
Vera treatment.
Many patients, after treatment with aloe for
various skin problems, commented that their skin quality had improved
and felt softer and smoother This is not surprising as Aloe Vera has been
added to many cosmetic products for many years because of its known rejuvenating
action.
It achieves this in several different ways. Firstly
the polysaccharides act as moisturisers, hydrating the skin. Secondly,
aloe is absorbed into the skin and stimulates the fibroblasts to replicate
themselves faster(10,11) and it is these cells that produce the collagen
and elastin fibres, so the skin becomes more elastic and less wrinkled.
Aloe also makes the surface of the skin smoother because of its cohesive
effect on the superficial flaking epidermal cells by sticking them together.
It also possesses the ability to interfere with the enzyme that produces
melanin deposits in the skin, preventing the formation of 'liver spots'
which tend to form in ageing skin. If Aloe Vera is applied regularly and
for long enough it will often cause established spots to disappear. The
best demonstration of this effect that I have ever seen, was shown by
Dr. Ivan Danhof, an American physician who has worked with topical aloe
products in the cosmetic industry for 30 years. When testing new creams
and lotions, being right handed, he always applied the material with the
fingers of his right hand to the back of his left hand in order to test
its texture, smell and penetrability. He now declares that he has one
old hand and one young hand and indeed the comparison when he puts his
hands together to show the backs, side by side, is quite remarkable. One
hand is the typical hand of a seventy year old with thinning, wrinkled
skin covered in a variety of blemishes, whilst the other, his left hand,
is clear and smooth and looks 30 years younger.
Although there is anecdotal evidence to suggest
that Aloe Vera helps inflammatory conditions of the gastro intestinal
tract such as gastritis, diverticulitis and colitis there is no firm evidence
to support this. One paper has looked at Aloe Vera in the treatment of
peptic ulcers with good results(12) and one paper by Dr. Jeffrey Bland(13)
of the Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine in California studied
the results of Aloe Vera on the gastro intestinal tract of normal people.
He found that Aloe Vera had several measurable effects. There was a faster
movement of food through the bowel with better protein digestion and absorption,
an increase in water in the stool made it bulkier, and a normalisation
of stool bacteria, where there had previously been high levels of yeasts
in some of the subjects. As a result of these findings I decided to look
at the effect of Aloe on the Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). This is an
extremely common condition affecting probably more than five million people
in the U.K. It is the commonest condition seen by the Gastro-enterologists
in hospital clinics; yet most people do not even consult their doctor.
The IBS is complex in its make up, and it is
acknowledged that there is usually both a physical and a psychological
component, resulting from stress. It is called a functional bowel disorder
because if the bowel is examined it appears to be perfectly normal in
every respect. There is no known cause and no uniformly effective conventional
medical treatment. However, it can be extremely debilitating to the sufferers
who complain of abdominal pain and bloating or intermittent diarrhoea,
sometimes alternating with constipation. Occasionally there is passage
of mucous.
The physical disorder is thought to be a dysmotility
or alteration in the normal smooth peristaltic movement of the bowel and
so it seemed a good subject for Aloe Vera. As I hoped, regular consumption
of Aloe Vera gel worked well in the majority of patients who tried it.
One female patient was so pleased with her newly controlled bowel that
she said "I can go shopping now with confidence it's great".
It is now my first line treatment for IBS.
Unfortunately, in all cases where Aloe Vera suppresses
symptoms they return after a few days if the drink is stopped, so taking
Aloe Vera in no way results in a permanent cure.
When looking at disorders of the immune system
I selected some patients with arthritis, some with asthma and some with
M.E. (Post Viral Syndrome). Only about 40-50% of the M.E. patients benefited
from drinking the Aloe Vera, but I got a much better response from the
arthritis and asthma sufferers.
People with Arthritis, under the influence of
Aloe Vera, were able to reduce the number of anti-inflammatory and pain
killing tablets to a level where they ceased to get the usual side effects
of abdominal pain and indigestion, whereas the asthmatics were able to
cut down on their usage of inhalers, including the steroid inhalers. These
effects were probably due to Aloe Vera's innate anti-inflammatory effect
as well as its effect on the immune system.
For various reasons it is generally not possible
in general practice to do proper randomised controlled trials using just
one's own patients but I am convinced that there is enough evidence available
now to suggest that the properties of this amazing plant should be properly
tested, to prove whether or not there is just a myth or real medicine
here. I for one, hope to be a part of this exciting field of research
over the next few years.
References
1. Collins, C.E., M.D. (1935), Vol 57 No. 6 June, The
Radiological Review and Chicago Medical Recorder. Aloe Vera as a Therapeutic Agent in
the Treatment of Roentgen and Radium Burns.
2. Collins, C.E. and Collins, C. (1935), Roentgen Dermatitis Treated with Fresh Whole Leaf
of Aloe Vera. American Journal of Roentgenology 33, 396-397.
3. Wright, C.S. (1936), Aloe Vera in the Treatment of Roentgen Ulcers and Telangiectasis. Journal
of the American Medical Association 106, 1363-1364.
4. Loveman, A.B. (1937), Leaf of Aloe Vera in Treatment of Roentgen Ray Ulcers. Archives
of Dermatology and Sphilology 36, 838-843.
5. Cutak, L. (1937), Aloe Vera as a Remedy for Burns. Missouri Botanical Garden
Bulletin 25, 169-174.
6. Mandeville, F.B. (1939), Aloe Vera in the Treatment of Radiation Ulcers of Mucous
Membranes. Radiology 32, 598-599.
7. Crewe, J.E. (1939), Aloes in the Treatment of Burns and Scalds. Minnesota Medicine
22, 538-539.
8. Rowe, T.D. (1940), Effect of Fresh Aloe Vera Jelly in the Treatment of Third-Degree
Roentgen Reactions on White Rats. Journal of the American Pharmaceutical Association
29, 348-350.
9. Rowe, T.D., Lovell, B.K. and Parks, L.M. (1941), Further Observations on the Use of
Aloe Vera Leaf in the Treatment of Third-Degree X-Ray Reactions. Journal of the
American Pharmaceutical Association 30, 266-269.
10. Danhof, I.E., McAnally, B.H. (1983), Stabilized Aloe Vera: Effect on Human Skin Cells.
Drug. Cosmet. Ind. 133, 52-106
11. Winters, W.D., Benavides, R., Clouse, W.J. (1981), Effects of Aloe Extracts on Human
Normal and Tumor Cells In Vitro. Eco. Bot. 35: 89-95.
12. Blitz, J.J., Smith, J.W. and Gerard, J.R. (1963), Aloe Vera Gel in Peptic Ulcer
Therapy: Preliminary Report. Journal of the American Osteopathic Association 62:
731-735.
13. Bland, J. Ph.D. (1985), Linus Pauling Institute of Science and Medicine, Palo Alto,
C.A., Prevention Magazine, Effect of Orally Consumed Aloe Vera Juice in
Gastrointestinal Function in Normal Humans.
The above first appeared in Positive Health issue 20 June/July
1997 and was one of four articles about Aloe Vera
in that issue.
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