Bezoar is a "natural remedy" that is able to cure cancer, diabetes, dengue and a host of illnesses ⁉
- 豪猪枣、箭猪枣、河猪枣 Porcupine Bezoar
- Jan 18, 2012
- 3 min read
Updated: Apr 22, 2021
One of the traditional folk medicine in the Malaysia is using porcupine bezoar. It was reported as universal medicine in ancient time. This bezoar has been a myth to the locals. The widespread use of the bezoar as an alternative medicine for treatment of deadly illnesses in Malaysia was passed down from generations of the multi-diverse ethnicity environment that existed here. Additionally, porcupine bezoar was also known as lifesaver and used by patients with terminal illness. Porcupine bezoar was found in the gastrointestinal tract of porcupine and made up of indigestible plant matters. This "miracle cure" that has been circulating through testimony and research.
Not all porcupines produce bezoars. Porcupine Bezoar is one of the most sought highly popular medicinal bezoar stones and Traditional Chinese TCM herb medicine in Malaysia and South East Asia region in general. The rarest porcupine bezoar is a popular TCM medicinal remedy which you can usually get in established Chinese pharmaceutical shop and old TCM medicinal halls. Porcupine bezoar powder is used to help patients in various types of treatment therapy-related work, provide quick boost of patient immune system, recover from post-surgery, long term healing for a comprehensive range of critical body illness and cure life-threatening diseases such Bacterial infection Inflammation, Dengue Viral fever, Diabetes, Recovery from Post Surgery wound pain, Post Chemotherapy rest recovery, as anti-Critical Illness and various forms of inflammatory illness ailments that people face without any side effects. Due to its rarity, the trend of reduce in availability and the challenges in sourcing and to find, quality porcupine bezoar have quickly become especially sought after miracle medicine and Porcupine bezoar price are generally on the high-end side.
Bezoar stones (Porcupine Bezoar) are masses of undigested organic and inorganic material, often within calcareous concretions, formed within the gastrointestinal tract. Introduced into Europe from the Arabic medical tradition at the time of the Crusades, the name comes from the Persian word, padzhar, which literally means 'antidote'. As early as the tenth century, the materia medica of Abu Mansur Muwaffak, compiled between 968 and 977 AD, commented on the bezoar, classifying it as a precious stone. 1 Different varieties of bezoar were recognised even at this early date; gathering information from a series of earlier authors, Al-Biruni (973-1048) describes at least five types, some of which may have been of mineralogical rather than animal origin, noting that they came predominantly from India and China. 2 Bezoar stones, although quite rare, enjoyed a great deal of popularity as an alexipharmic (antidote to poison). The European Age of Discovery during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries helped to establish trade routes to support a rapidly growing home market for exotic goods, including many plants, animals and minerals which were believed to have therapeutic properties. The English, Dutch, Spanish, Portuguese, and Italians vied for dominance in the ever expanding trade between Europe and India, China and South East Asia, including the Spice Islands or Moluccas. The estab-lishment of settlements, trading posts, and missionary programmes all helped to secure footholds in the trading areas. Bezoar stones steadily increased in popularity. Garcia de Orta (1490–1568), a Portuguese Jewish physician and naturalist who studied medicine in Spain, fled his home country for fear of the Inquisition, sailing to India as Chief Physician to the fleet of Viceroy Martim Afonso de Sousa (circa 1500-1571); he eventually settled in Goa. Here, he published his famous Colóquios dos simples e drogas he cousas medicinais da Índia ('Conversations on the simples, drugs and medicinal substances of India') in 1563. In the seventeenth Colloquy, he states: 3 But the best medicine of all is three grains of bezar stone, which the Persians call pazar. It is of such use that it almost miraculously dilates the powers of the heart.

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