Saw Palmetto extract CAS 84604-15-9

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Model: MOS 84604-15-9
Brand Name: MOSINTER
CAS No.: 84604-15-9
Purity: 25% , 45%
Appearance: Yellow or white powder flow ability

Saw Palmetto extract (CAS: 84604-15-9)

Item Index
Appearance Yellow or white powder flow ability
Purity 25% , 45%

Saw palmetto extract is an extract of the fruit of Serenoa repens. It is rich in fatty acids and phytosterols.

It has been used in traditional, eclectic, and alternative medicine to treat a variety of conditions, most notably 

benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Review of clinical trials, including those conducted by the National Center

for Complementary and Alternative Medicine, found the extract to be no more effective than placebo for BPH.

Medicinal use

Saw palmetto is used in several forms of traditional herbal medicine. American Indians used the fruit for food and

to treat a variety of urinary and reproductive system problems. TheMayans drank it as a tonic, and the Seminoles 

used the berries as an expectorant and antiseptic.

Crude saw palmetto extract was used by European/American medical practitioners for at least 200 years for various

conditions, including asthenia (weakness), recovery from major illness, and urogenital problems. The eclectic medicine 

practitioner H. W. Felter wrote of it, “Saw palmetto is a nerve sedative, expectorant, and a nutritive tonic, acting kindly

upon the digestive tract…Its most direct action appears to be upon the reproductive organs when undergoing waste of tissue…”

King’s American Dispensatory (1898) says of the extract:

It is also an expectorant, and controls irritation of mucous tissues. It has proved useful in irritative cough, chronic bronchial

coughs, whooping-cough, laryngitis, acute and chronic, acute catarrh, asthma, tubercular laryngitis, and in the cough of 

phthisis pulmonalis. Upon the digestive organs it acts kindly, improving the appetite, digestion, and assimilation. However,

its most pronounced effects appear to be those exerted upon the urino-genital tracts of both male and female, and upon all the

organs concerned in reproduction. It is said to enlarge wasted organs, as the breasts, ovaries, and testicles, while the paradoxical

claim is also made that it reduces hypertrophy of the prostate. Possibly this may be explained by claiming that it tends toward the

production of a normal condition, reducing parts when unhealthily enlarged, and increasing them when atrophied.

Saw palmetto extract is the most popular herbal treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia, a common condition in older men.

Early research indicated that the extract is well-tolerated and suggested “mild to moderate improvement in urinary symptoms and

flow measures.” Later trials of higher methodological quality indicated no difference from placebo.Questions of adequate blinding 

and delivery of any active ingredients remain. The latest Cochrane Database review (2009) concludes that “Serenoa repens was not

more effective than placebo for treatment of urinary symptoms consistent with BPH.”

A 2011 study published in JAMA (The Journal of the American Medical Association) reported on a double-blind study that eleven

North American clinics conducted on 369 men. The study found that saw palmetto fruit extract failed to reduce urinary tract symptoms

more than placebo.[10] Men in the experimental group experienced a 2.20 point drop in their American Urological Assn. Symptom

Index (AUASI) score. However, men in the placebo group saw a 2.99 point drop. The Los Angeles Times reports, “42.6% of the men

in the extract group saw their AUASI scores fall by at least three points; 44.2% of the men in the placebo group saw the same degree

of benefit.” The study was funded by several offices within the NIH, including the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine.”

Inhibition of both forms of 5-alpha-reductase with no reduction in cellular capacity to secrete prostate-specific antigen is indicated.Other

proposals for mechanisms of action include interfering with dihydrotestosterone binding to the androgen receptor, relaxing smooth muscle

tissue similarly to alpha antagonist medicine, and acting as aphytoestrogen.

Saw palmetto extract has been suggested as a potential treatment for male pattern baldness.

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