
Is Moringa the Most Nutritious Food?Β
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Does the so-called miracle tree live up to the hype?
Moringa (Moringa oleifera) is a plant commonly known as the βmiracleβ tree due to its purported healing powers across a spectrum of diseases. If βmiracleβ isnβt hyperbolic enough for you, βon the Internet,β itβs also known as βGodβs Gift to Man.β Is moringa a miracle or just a mirage? βThe enthusiasm for the health beneο¬ts of M. oleifera is in dire contrast with the scarcity of strong experimental and clinical evidence supporting them. Fortunately, the chasm is slowly being ο¬lled.β There has been a surge in scientiο¬c publications on moringa. In just the last ten years, the number of articles is closer to a thousand, as shown here and at 1:02 in my video The Benefits of Moringa: Is It the Most Nutritious Food?.
What got my attention was the presence of glucosinolates, compounds that boost our liverβs detoxifying enzymes. I thought they were only found in cruciferous vegetables, such as cabbage, broccoli, kale, collards, and cauliflower. Still, it turns out theyβre also present in the moringa family, with a potency comparable to broccoli. But rather than mail-ordering exotic moringa powder, why not just eat broccoli?Is there something special about moringa?
βMoringa oleifera has been described as the most nutritious tree yet discovered,β but who eats trees? Moringa supposedly βcontains higher amounts of elemental nutrients than most conventional vegetable sources,β such as featuring 10 times more vitamin A than carrots, 12 times more vitamin C than oranges, 17 times more calcium than milk, 15 times more potassium than bananas, 25 times more iron than spinach, and 9 times more protein than yogurt, as shown here and at 2:08 in my video.Β
Sounds impressive, but first of all, even if this were true, it is relevant for 100 grams of dry moringa leaf, which is about 14 tablespoons, almost a whole cup of leaf powder. Researchers have had trouble getting people to eat even 20 grams, so anything more would likely βresult in excessively unpleasant taste, due to the bitterness of the leaves.β
Secondly, the nutritional claims in these papers are βadapted from Fuglie,β which is evidently a lay publication. If you go to the nutrient database of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and enter a more reasonable dose, such as the amount that might be in a smoothie, about a tablespoon, for instance, a serving of moringa powder has as much vitamin A as a quarter of one baby carrot and as much vitamin C as one one-hundredth of an orange. So, an orange has as much vitamin C as a hundred tablespoons of moringa. A serving of moringa powder has the calcium of half a cup of milk, the potassium of not fifteen bananas but a quarter of one banana, the iron of a quarter cup of spinach, and the protein of a third of a container of yogurt, as seen below and at 3:15 in my video. So, it may be nutritious, but not off the charts and certainly not whatβs commonly touted. So, again, why not just eat broccoli?
Moringa does seem to have anticancer activityβin a petri dishβagainst cell lines of breast cancer, lung cancer, skin cancer, and fibrosarcoma, while tending to leave normal cells relatively alone, but there havenβt been any clinical studies. Whatβs the point in finding out that βMoringa oleifera extract enhances sexual performance in stressed rats,β as one study was titled?
Studies like βEffect of supplementation of drumstick (Moringa oleifera) and amaranth (Amaranthus tricolor) leaves powder on antioxidant profile and oxidative status among postmenopausal womenβ started to make things a little interesting. When researchers were testing the effects of a tablespoon of moringa leaf powder once a day for three months on antioxidant status, they saw a drop in oxidative stress, as one might expect from eating any healthy plant food. However, they also saw a drop in fasting blood sugars from prediabetic levels exceeding 100 to more normal levels. Now, thatβs interesting. Should we start recommending a daily tablespoon of moringa powder to people with diabetes, or was it just a fluke? Iβll discuss the study βMoringa oleifera and glycemic [blood sugar] control: A review of the current evidenceβ next.
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