Anonymous ID: e740e5 Aug. 7, 2021, 10:02 p.m. No.14295679   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5829 >>5838 >>5844 >>5867

to whom it may serve, GUAVA LEAVES TEA

Anons I just been ill these last 5 days with some viral shit.

Tried some regular medication prescribed by a dumbfuck. Nothing.

5 days go by and today I casually happened to drink this tea made of guava leaves and holy fucking shit I started feeling better like in the next half hour. 8 hours later, feel way better and I'm sipping through my second cup right now, I really think I'll be good for tomorrow.

This shit has some antiviral goodness in it. I did some surface GOOG and found this.

It's antioxidant, antiviral, antifungical, antibacterial, anti-cancer cells, ANTI INFLAMMATORY…

https://europepmc.org/article/med/22453134

>Rapid evolution of influenza RNA virus has resulted in limitation of vaccine effectiveness, increased emergence of drug-resistant viruses and occurrence of pandemics. A new effective antiviral is therefore needed for control of the highly mutative influenza virus. Teas prepared by the infusion method were tested for their anti-influenza activity against clinical influenza A (H1N1) isolates by a 19-h influenza growth inhibition assay with ST6Gal I-expressing MDCK cells (AX4 cells) using fluorogenic quantification and chromogenic visualization. Guava tea markedly inhibited the growth of A/Narita/1/2009 (amantadine-resistant pandemic 2009 strain) at an IC(50) of 0.05% and the growth of A/Yamaguchi/20/06 (sensitive strain) and A/Kitakyushu/10/06 (oseltamivir-resistant strain) at similar IC(50) values ranging from 0.24% to 0.42% in AX4 cells, being 3.4- to 5.4-fold more potent than green tea (IC(50) values: 0.27% for the 2009 pandemic strain and 0.91% to 1.44% for the seasonal strains). In contrast to both teas, oseltamivir carboxylate (OC) demonstrated high potency against the growth of A/Narita/1/09 (IC(50) of 3.83nM) and A/Yamaguchi/20/06 (IC(50) of 11.57nM) but not against that of A/Kitakyushu/10/06 bearing a His274-to-Tyr substitution (IC(50) of 15.97μM). Immunofluorescence analysis under a confocal microscope indicated that both teas inhibited the most susceptible A/Narita/1/2009 virus at the initial stage of virus infection. This is consistent with results of direct inhibition assays showing that both teas inhibited viral hemagglutination at concentrations comparable to their growth inhibition concentrations but inhibited sialidase activity at about 8-times higher concentrations. Guava tea shows promise to be efficacious for control of epidemic and pandemic influenza viruses including oseltamivir-resistant strains, and its broad target blockage makes it less likely to lead to emergence of viral resistance.

 

Also

https://clinphytoscience.springeropen.com/track/pdf/10.1186/s40816-018-0093-8.pdf

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/324758