Source: taken from the USA medical journal
Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients
Effects of Peruvian Maca on Hormonal Functions
Maca’s cultivation goes back perhaps five millennia. It was an integral part of the diet and commerce of the high Andes region. When they controlled that certain South American region, the Incas found maca so potent that they restricted its use to their Royalty’s court. Upon overrunning the Inca people, conquering Spaniards became aware of this plant’s value and collected tribute in maca roots for export to Spain. Maca was used as an energy enhancer and for nutrition by the Spanish Royalty as well. But eventually knowledge of maca’s special qualities died out, being preserved only in a few remote Peruvian communities. In the 1960s and later in the 1980s, German and North American scientists researching botanicals in Peru, rekindled interest in maca through nutritional analyses of what was designated as ‘the lost crops of the Andes.’ The publication of a book by that name introduced maca to the world. Proteins, as polypeptides, make up 11% of the dry maca root and 14% of the whole maca paste. Calcium makes up 10% of maca’s mineral count. Magnesium and potassium are also present in significant amounts. Other maca minerals include iron, silica, and traces of iodine, manganese zinc, copper, and sodium. Starch, a hexosane polysaccharide in maca, contains the triple minerals calcium, phosphorus, and iron. The scientist responsible for most of the current knowledge of the maca plant is Gloria Chacon de Popivici, PhD, a Peruvian biologist trained at the University of San Marcos, in Lima, Peru. Dr. Chacon wrote her dissertation in the early l960’s on the maca root, and did groundbreaking work on the plant by discovering a new species. By analyzing its chemical actives, she pinpointed their hormonal effects. Dr. Chacon also authored a book describing the root’s nourishing micronutrients: La importancia de Lepidium peruvianum Chacon (Maca) en la Alimentacion y Salud del ser Humano y Animal 2,000 Ados Antes y Despues de Cristo y en el Siglo. Published in Lima, in 1997, the book is a definitive study on maca and discusses its use from 8000 BC to the present and into the 21st century. This biologist/author has done the most important scientific work to date on the maca plant. In particular, Dr. Chacon isolated four alkaloids from the maca root and carried out animal studies with male and female rats given either powdered maca root or alkaloids isolated from the roots. In comparison with the animal control groups, those receiving either root powder or alkaloids showed multiple egg follicle maturation in females and, in males, significantly higher sperm production and motility rates than control groups. Now practicing complementary medicine with an emphasis on the use of medicinal herbs, one of the earliest modern pioneers in the therapeutic use of this ancient herb for an urban population is Hugo Malaspina, MD, a respected cardiologist in Lima. Dr. Malaspina has been using the maca root in his practice for a decade and makes the following observations. ‘There are different medicinal plants that work on the ovaries by stimulating them. With maca, though, we should say that it ‘regulates’ the ovarian function.’ Dr. Malaspina has even found maca to be effective for women with hysterectomies. He discussed a 49-year old woman who had a hysterectomy eight years ago, although she still retained her ovaries. ‘The woman was beginning to get menopausal symptoms - hot flashes, cold feet, depression, tachycardia, some constipation and some bone loss. Because she had breast implants, usual hormone replacement therapy was not an option for her,’ explained Dr. Malaspina. ‘I started her on maca and within three months the depression, constipation, and hot flashes cleared up. Based on my experience with some other patients, I expect that her bone density will improve as will, but that will take longer.’ Another Peruvian pioneer in the therapeutic application of maca integrated into a modem medical practice is Jorge Aguila Calderon, MD. An internist, Dr. Aguila Calderon is former Chief of the Department of Biological Sciences and Dean of the Faculty of Human Medicine at the National University of Federico Villarreal in Lima. Like Dr. Malaspina, he prescribes maca for a wide variety of conditions, including osteoporosis and the healing of bone fractures in the very elderly. ‘Maca has a lot of easily absorbable calcium in it, plus magnesium, and a fair amount of allies which we are finding very useful in treating the decalcification of bones in children and adults.’ Physicians in the United States believe this herb has the potential of a balanced answer to the effects of aging on the endocrine system. Many who have tried phytoestrogens and/or precursor hormones such as DHEA or pregnenolone, or even natural hormone replacement therapy and have been dissatisfied, are getting excellent results from their use of maca root. Gabriel Cousens, MD, practicing internal medicine in Patagonia, Arizona, says, “Whenever possible, I prefer to use maca therapy rather than hormone replacement therapy because HRT actually ages the body diminishing the hormone producing capability of the glands. Maca has proven to be very effective with menopausal patients in eliminating hot flashes and depression and in increasing energy levels. They find the right dosage level, sometimes I have started the patient on maca treatment with a half a teaspoon of powder or three capsules a day. In some cases I have raised the dosage to a teaspoon or six capsules a day for full effectiveness.” Maca root, in keeping with its mode of acting through the hypothalamus and pituitary, has a balancing and nourishing effect on the adrenal glands. Henry Campanile, MD, a 50-year old specialist in internal and family/complementary medicine practicing in St. Petersburg, Florida, relates: ‘I happen to have been born with one adrenal gland just like my father. I started taking cortisone in my late twenties to relieve the fatigue which I was already feeling. Knowing the dangers of long term cortisone use, I looked around for an alternative, and this circumstance is what got me interested in complementary medicine. I started using pregnenelone about 10 years ago and it has been fairly satisfactory. But one of my patients told me about Maca, and I started taking it about a month ago. It is phenomenal! I haven’t felt this good since I was 20 years old. I have so much energy and look so well, my patients have remarked on it and told me how rested I seem. I’ve got so much energy now have started an exercise program.’ Another American doctor who has recently begun to use maca therapeutically for some patients is of New Rochelle, New York. Dr. Clark, who utilizes chelation therapy and ozone therapy in addition to herbs, vitamins and minerals in his practice stated, ‘I’m amazed at how fast maca worked on two patients that I have been concerned about for some time.’ He described one patient as 55 year-old Mary T, a postmenopausal, woman. Mary T was possessed of numerous health problems, including somewhat elevated blood sugar, hypertension, atrial fibrillation, and hypomagnesemia. She had been acutely ill for two months with osteomyelitis and generalized sepsis. Unable to work, she was suffering from great fatigue and depression and feeling ‘worse and worse’ over the last five years. ‘Within just four days of taking the maca, Mary T went through an enormous turnaround,’ said Dr. Clark. ‘She has gone out to shop in the stores; she’s cleaning her house; she feels strong and vigorous; and her depression is gone.’ One young West Coast woman, Susan F, has an interesting experience to tell. After giving birth to two children, the 31-year old mother decided to use contraceptive pills for the first time. Since a possible side effect of the method she chose was not having a period, Susan F didn’t think anything of its non-occurrence until six months later when she also began experiencing mood swings, hot flashes, and dry skin. Her visit to an endocrinologist revealed that the woman’s hormones were at ‘menopause’ levels. Then Susan’s mother told her that early menopause runs in the family. Her grandmother, her mother, and her older sister all had early menopause. It had been a year since her last period, and by chance her husband brought home some Maca for himself. He told his wife to try it, too, which she did. From her White Plains, New York, clinic, nurse-practitioner Stephanie Sulger-Smith, RN, MS, says that she read an article about postmenopausal health which discussed Maca. At her clinic she offers nutritional counselling for a variety of conditions. There are always a few individuals who will show an allergic reaction or who fall into a group of women or men for whom a pituitary stimulator such as maca is contraindicated in the absence of studies that prove its safety. These groups include men with a high PSA level or a history of prostate cancer. Men using maca on a regular basis should undergo periodic PSA tests. Women with a history of breast cancer or other types of hormone-related cancer also fall into this group.’ Maca as an Anti-Aging Herb for Both Men and Women Garry P. Gordon, MD, former president of the American College for Advancement in Medicine, now Founder and President of the International College of advanced Longevity Medicine, located in Chicago, Illinois, bases his appreciation of maca on his own experience with it. Speaking with me from Payson, Arizona, Dr. Gordon said, ‘We all hear rumors about various products like maca. But using this Peruvian root myself, I personally experienced a significant improvement in erectile tissue response. I call it ‘nature’s answer to Viagra™’. What I see in maca is a means of normalizing our steroid hormones like testosterone, progesterone, and oestrogen. Therefore it has facility to forestall the hormonal changes of aging,’ Dr. Gordon believes. ‘It acts on men to restore them to a healthy functional status in which they experience a more active libido. Lots of men and women who previously believed their sexual problems were psychological are now clearly going to look for something physiological to improve quality of life in the area of sexuality,’ says Dr. Gordon. ‘Of course, as someone interested in longevity, I’m aware that mortality comes on much sooner for those individuals whose sexual activity is diminished or nonexistent. In other words, I believe that people who engage in sex twice a week or more live longer. I’ve found sexual activity to be a reliable marker for overall aging.” Burton Goldberg, President of Alternative Medicine Publishing in Tiburon, California, whose latest book is An Alternative Medicine Definitive Guide to Cancer is another enthusiast of maca. He says that when he tried maca he was very pleased with the results and began taking it regularly. ‘I’m a 72 year old man and this maca has taken 25 years off my aging sex life,’ declares Burton Goldberg. ‘That’s pretty important to me!’ Dr. Garry Gordon is concerned about reproductive problems in today’s world. ‘Society faces a huge problem of dropping sperm counts and sex hormone difficulties. But maca promises a non toxic solution with no downside effects. It’s a therapy that appears to offer men and women the chance for hormonal rejuvenation,’ concludes Dr. Gordon. ‘We currently live in an era in which almost everyone will be doing something to deal with the hormonal consequences of aging. And Maca is now readily available.”
The Importance of Maca in the History of Peru
The Nutritional Value of Maca
The New Maca Species, Lepidium peruvianum Chacon
Effects of Maca on the Endocrine Glands
Hugo Malaspina, MD, Works with Maca
Maca Provides Benefit Following Hysterectomy
Jorge A Calderon, MD, Prescribes Maca
American Physician Gabriel Cousens, MD, Uses Maca
Henry Campanile, M.D., Offers Adrenal Balancing
Harold Clark, MD., Makes Maca a Key Remedy
Early Menopause and Vaginal Dryness Avoided
Results for a Nurse-Practitioner and Her Patients