BBC New Report - Sampling The Kalihari Cactus Diet
Friday, 30 May, 2003, 09:56 GMT 10:56 UK
Sampling the Kalahari cactus diet
Correspondent's Tom Mangold travelled to Africa
and sampled the appetite suppressing Hoodia, a plant which may make
Kalahari bushmen millionaires.
Imagine this: an organic pill that kills the appetite
and attacks obesity.
It has no known side-effects, and contains a molecule
that fools your brain into believing you are full.
Deep inside the African Kalahari desert, grows an
ugly cactus called the Hoodia. It thrives in extremely high temperatures,
and takes years to mature.
The San Bushmen of the Kalahari, one of the world's
oldest and most primitive tribes, had been eating the Hoodia for
thousands of years, to stave off hunger during long hunting trips.
When South African scientists were routinely testing
it, they discovered the plant contained a previously unknown molecule,
which has since been christened P 57.
The license was sold to a Cambridgeshire bio-pharmaceutical
company, Phytopharm, who in turn sold the development and marketing
rights to the giant Pfizer Corporation.
When I travelled to the Kalahari, I met families of
the San bushmen.
It is a sad, impoverished and displaced tribe, still
unaware they are sitting on top of a goldmine.
But if the Hoodia works, the 100,000 San strung along
the edge of the Kalahari will become overnight millionaires on royalties
negotiated by their South African lawyer Roger Chennells.
And they will need all the help they can to secure
the money.
Currently, many bushmen smoke large quantities of
marijuana, suffer from alcoholism, and have neither possessions
nor any sense of the value of money.
The truth is no-one has fully grasped what the magic
molecule means for their counterparts in the developed world.
Blood sugar
According to the British Heart Foundation 17% of men
and 21% of women are obese, while 46% of men and 32% of women are
overweight.
So the drug's marketing potential speaks for itself.
Phytopharm's Dr Richard Dixey explained how P.57 actually
works:
"There is a part of your brain, the hypothalamus.
Within that mid-brain there are nerve cells that sense glucose sugar.
"When you eat, blood sugar goes up because of the
food, these cells start firing and now you are full.
"What the Hoodia seems to contain is a molecule that
is about 10,000 times as active as glucose.
"It goes to the mid-brain and actually makes those
nerve cells fire as if you were full. But you have not eaten. Nor
do you want to."
Clinical trials
Dixey organised the first animal trials for Hoodia.
Rats, a species that will eat literally anything, stopped eating
completely.
When the first human clinical trial was conducted,
a morbidly obese group of people were placed in a "phase 1 unit",
a place as close to prison as it gets.
All the volunteers could do all day was read papers,
watch television, and eat.
Half were given Hoodia, half placebo. Fifteen days
later, the Hoodia group had reduced their calorie intake by 1000
a day.
It was a stunning success.
The cactus test
In order to see for ourselves, we drove into the desert,
four hours north of Capetown in search of the cactus.
Once there, we found an unattractive plant which sprouts
about 10 tentacles, and is the size of a long cucumber.
Each tentacle is covered in spikes which need to be
carefully peeled.
Inside is a slightly unpleasant-tasting, fleshy plant.
At about 1800hrs I ate about half a banana size -
and later so did my cameraman.
Soon after, we began the four hour drive back to Capetown.
The plant is said to have a feel-good almost aphrodisiac
quality, and I have to say, we felt good.
But more significantly, we did not even think about
food. Our brains really were telling us we were full. It was a magnificent
deception.
Dinner time came and went. We reached our hotel at
about midnight and went to bed without food. And the next day, neither
of us wanted nor ate breakfast.
I ate lunch but without appetite and very little pleasure.
Partial then full appetite returned slowly after 24 hours.
The future
Mr Chennells is ecstatic:
"The San will finally throw off thousands of years
of oppression, poverty, social isolation and discrimination.
"We will create trust funds with their Hoodia royalties
and the children will join South Africa's middle classes in our
lifetime.
"I envisage Hoodia cafes in London and New York, salads
will be served and the Hoodia cut like cucumber on to the salad.
"It will need flavouring to counter its unpleasant
taste, but if it has no side effects and no cumulative side-effects."
Unfortunately for the overweight, Hoodia will not
be around for several years, the clinical trials still have several
years to run.
Do not travel to the Kalahari to steal the cactus
as it is hard to find and illegal to export.
And beware internet sites offering Hoodia "pills"
from the US as we tested the leading brand and discovered it has
no discernible Hoodia in it.
So just be patient. Help is at hand.
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