 |
AVELOZ
EXTRACT |
|
|
| a tenacious esharotic (tissue
tearing) plant from South America. |
|
| |
Aveloz is a
spurge shrub native
to tropical South America. Called Aveloz in Brazil
and Alvelos in Spanish speaking countries, it is known
as mataverruga (meaning kill-wart) by the local natives.
The milky sap of the Aveloz shrub is a tissue tearing
escharotic with heat
exuding properties. |
|
Rich Folklore History
Aveloz is an important folk medicine item of
the Amazon Indians, who
have been using the substance
through time immemorial and
told it secrets to the many
colonists who settled in
northeastern Brazil.
Dr. Pamifilio, who practiced
medicine in Pernambucco,
Brazil into the 1880's and 1890's
is given credit for introducing the
old Indian remedy into the white man’s
pharmacopoeias.
|
His
reports on Aveloz sap were taken back to Europe by Juan Gomez
Pamo, who had been a professor of medicine in Havana before
being appointed as the Queen of Spain’s public health
counselor.
|
Aveloz remained
relatively obscure until the 1980s when the ‘Spotlight
magazine’ published a story detailing its rich folklore
uses and its amazing effects upon human health.
The botanical name for Aveloz is Euphorbia heterodoxa. Other
botanical names for related varieties include:
|
|
| Euphorbia entheurodoxa,
Euphorbia insulana, Euphorbia Humnoclada, Euphorbia gymnoclada
among others. They all have the same medicinal properties,
although they vary slightly in shape and size. The saps of
various Euphorbia species have been used in folk medicine
since at least 400 B.C.
|

 |
The botanical
name for Aveloz is Euphorbia heterodoxa. Other botanical
names for related varieties include: Euphorbia entheurodoxa,
Euphorbia insulana, Euphorbia Humnoclada, Euphorbia
gymnoclada among others. They all have the same medicinal
properties, although they vary slightly in shape and
size. The saps of various Euphorbia species have been
used in folk medicine since at least 400 B.C.
Tenacious, Heat Exuding Plant
Aveloz is a succulent plant growing to a height
of about 10 meters and is indigenous to tropical areas
and rainforests in the Amazon, Madagascar and South
Africa. The main trunk and branches are woody and brown
but the younger branches are green and cylindrical,
looking like so many pencils, which is why it is sometimes
called ‘the Pencil Tree.’ |
It is a tenacious plant
that survives changes such as deforestation, drought
and advancing deserts where no other plants can.
Before the advent of the white man, the part of South
America that is now known as the ‘Hump of Brazil’
was covered with primeval forest. Hot, dry winds have
destroyed the region, killing the vegetation right and
left and exposing vast expanses of red clay, which is
blown away in great dust storms. This systematic deforestation
has decimated the entire area, where a miniature desert
is taking shape.
Aveloz is the only plant that has withstood all these
changes - deforestation, drought and the advancing desert.
In fact, it seems to thrive amid the devastation and
is spreading on the harsh red clay soil. The Aveloz
plant even helps to spread the devastation because of
unusual property- it burns any living thing coming into
contact with it.
This herb is listed as a tissue tearing esharotic which
is a substances that can tear apart unhealthy tissue.
In this case the heat exuding properties of Aveloz is
the reason it functions as such a powerful esharotic.
All parts of the plant ooze a caustic milky sap when
damaged like many other Euphorbia species. Direct contact
of the sap with the eyes can cause temporary blindness
for several days. The caustic sap can also cause skin
burns and dermatitis. However, in the diluted extract
preparation, these effects are not experienced.

|
|
|
Phytochemical Properties Of Aveloz
A wide range of phytochemicals are contained
in the Aveloz sap:
3,3'-di-o-methylellagic-acid,12-o-(2z)(4e)-octadienoyl-4-deoxyphorbol-
13-acetate, Beta-sitosterol, Caoutchouc, Citric-acid, Ellagic-acid,
Euphol, Euphorone, Glucose, Hentriacontane, Hentriacontanol,
Isoeuphoral, Kamepferol, Malic-acid, Resin, Sapogenin-acetates,
Succinic-acid, Taraxasterol, Taraxerin, Tirucallol.
In addition to Aveloz, ellagic acid is also contained in many
health giving fruits such as such as raspberries, strawberries
and pomegranates. Ellagic acid reinforces and strengthens
the outer wall of healthy (aerobic) cells and helps protect
them from the invasion of unhealthy (anaerobic) cells. When
anaerobic cells are successful in permeating neighboring aerobic
cells, these healthy cells then become anaerobic.
Ellagic acid in pill form has been known to cause severe cases
of nausea and vomiting.. This side effect, however, does not
occur in the natural Aveloz product just as this does not
occur when ellagic acid is consumed in its other natural forms
such as berries.
Some of the other compounds in Aveloz are diterpene esters
which has been subject of a great deal of medical research.
Aveloz works synergistically with the Lapacho Extract and
they make a great herbal combination. We have been making
this combination available since 1980.
Dosage: Add 5 drops of Aveloz
Extract to a liquid beverage (preferably in Willard’s
Water) and take 3 times per day on an empty stomach.
|
|
|
Ordering Information
2oz. Bottle of Liquid Extract of Aveloz
1 bottle $30.00
2 bottles ($27.50 each) 55.00
6 bottles ($25.00 each) $150.00
Medical Research Products 10873 NW 52 Street
Unit Bay 7 & 8
Sunrise, FL 33351 USA
800-443-3030 Toll Free US or Canada
954-641-0981 Local or International
954-641-6416 Fax
Website: www.cantron.com
E-mail: questions@cantron.com
|

|
|
|
 |