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I Believe in Plant Medicine Diet for Diseases
I Believe in Plant Medicine Diet for Diseases
ACKNOWLEDGMENT We thank Kirsten Eriksen, Dorthe Rasmussen, Lene Truds?, and Tove Skrumsager Hansen for skillful technical assistance. REFERENCES 1. Soejarto DD, Kinghorn AD, Farnsworth NR: Potential sweetening agents of plant origin. III. Organoleptic evaluation of Stevia leaf

I Believe in Plant Medicine Diet for Diseases

ACKNOWLEDGMENT We thank Kirsten Eriksen, Dorthe Rasmussen, Lene Truds?, and Tove Skrumsager Hansen for skillful technical assistance. REFERENCES 1. Soejarto DD, Kinghorn AD, Farnsworth NR: Potential sweetening agents of plant origin. III. Organoleptic evaluation of Stevia leaf

chemical companies
Herbarium samples for sweetness. J Nat Prod 45:590-599, 1982

2. Shibata H, Sawa Y, Oka T, et al: Steviol and steviol-glycoside:

Glucosyltransferase activities in Stevia rebaudiana Bertoni-Purification and partial characterization. Arch Biochem Biophys 321:390-396, 1995

3. Oviedo CA, Franciani G, Moreno R, et al: Action hipoglucemiante de la stevia rebaudiana bertoni. Seventh Congress of the International Diabetes Federation, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1970 (abstr 208)

4. Jeppesen PB, Gregersen S, Poulsen CR, et al: Stevioside acts

directly on pancreatic beta cells to secrete insulin: Actions independent

of cyclic adenosine monophosphate and adenosine triphosphate-sensitive K-channel activity. Metabolism 49:208-214, 2000

5. Jeppesen PB, Gregersen S, Rolfsen SE, et al: Antihyperglycemic

and blood pressure-reducing effects of stevioside in the diabetic GotoKakizaki rat. Metabolism 52:372-378, 2003 6. Gregersen S, Thomsen JL, Brock B, et al: Endothelin-1 stimulates insulin secretion by direct action on the islets of Langerhans in mice.