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Medicine from FrankincensePharmacists of University Jena clarify the anti-inflammatory impact of boswellic acids, which have fewer side effects than today's prevalent anti-inflammatory treatments. (Jena, Germany)—It was one of the gifts of the Magi—in addition to myrrh and gold they offered frankincense to the newly born baby Jesus. Since the ancient world, the aromatic fragrance of burning Boswellia resin has been part of many religious ceremonies and is still used as a means to indicate special festive atmosphere in the church today. But frankincense can do much more: "The resin from the trunk of Boswellia trees contains anti-inflammatory substances," Professor Dr. Oliver Werz of the Friedrich Schiller University Jena (Germany) says. The chair of Pharmaceutical and Medical Chemistry is convinced that these substances can be very beneficial in therapies against diseases like asthma, rheumatoid arthritis or atopic dermatitis.
In their latest study the researchers around Professor Werz additionally compared the resin of different kinds of frankincense in its anti-inflammatory impact. There are more than ten Boswellia species in the world. The most well-known and widely used one is the Boswellia serrata from Northern and central India. "We were able to show that the resin of the Boswellia papyrifera is ten times more potent," Professor Werz explains a further result of his research. This species mostly occurs in the Northeast of Africa (Ethiopia, Somalia) and on the Arabian Peninsula (Yemen, Oman). Whether frankincense will become accepted, is indeed not only due to the outcome of the clinical examination which is yet to come. "Boswellic acids exclusively occur in the resin of Boswellia trees and are very difficult to produce synthetically," Werz points out. Therefore these trees are the only source of these promising active ingredients. However Boswellia trees are already an endangered tree species. In many places they are just being used as heating fuel. "Thereby without sustained protection not only plant species are endangered but at the same time medicine loses promising active ingredients," Professor Werz warns.
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