Fiji Sun

Turning Papaya Leaf into a Cure for Dengue Fever

- UNIVERSITY OF NOTTINGHAM MALAYSIA CAMPUS Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Researcher­s in University of Nottingham have found that bioactive compound called ‘carpaine’ in papaya leaf extract helps to stop internal haemorrhag­e in dengue fever.

It was a Sri Lankan researcher Dr Sanath Hettige who pointed out in 2008 that the vital power of Papaya leaf extract to treat Dengue fever.

Later on he produced Sri Lankan patented product PAPAYA CAP, which won the Presidenti­al award for the best medical invention of the year and the silver award for the same in the Internatio­nal Innovation Fair in India. Now Malaysian government, a keen player in medical innovation­s industry is trying to develop its own kind of drug using Papaya leaf extract.

An important question worth to rise here is, Why Sri Lanka still lagging on the expertise of the researcher Dr Sanath Hettige!

Traditiona­l remedy

A traditiona­l herbal remedy for the dangerous tropical disease ‘dengue fever’ could be turned into a pill to treat patients thanks to groundbrea­king research by scientists at the University of Nottingham’s Malaysia Campus (UNMC).

Papaya leaf juice has for a long time been used in some areas of India and South East Asia as a treatment for dengue fever. A compound in the juice is known to help with blood clotting and can restrict the internal bleeding caused by the disease.

Now, thanks to funding from the Malaysian Ministry of Higher Education, a team of chemical engineers in the University’s Food and Pharmaceut­ical Engineerin­g Group in Malaysia are tackling the challenge of extracting the bioactive compound ‘carpaine’ for use in a pill for dengue.

About Dengue

Dengue is a mosquito-born viral infection found in tropical and sub-tropical climates and tends to be concentrat­ed in urban and semi-urban areas.

The infection causes flu-like symptoms and can develop into a potentiall­y fatal form of the disease – Dengue Haemorrhag­ic Fever. The incidence worldwide has grown dramatical­ly in recent decades with severe dengue now a leading cause of hospitalis­ation and death among children and adults in Asia and Latin America.

There is currently no vaccine for it. Leading the research at UNMC, Associate Professor Dr Ching Lik Hii, said: “Dengue has been a big issue in Malaysia and other countries with similar climates for more than 20 years.

“People are dying and more people are being infected as the Aedes mosquito population grows and becomes more active. “This global problem inspired me to look for something that is a well-known traditiona­l plant based remedy and make it much easier to process and consume”.

“We are targeting the active bio-compound carpaine which we know can increase blood platelets and therefore helps reduce internal bleeding.

“We are also looking at whether the younger leaves or the older leaves contain more carpaine, and also whether the stems of the papaya plant could also be useful.”

The carpaine compound is extracted by using alcohol. An acid-base extraction procedure is then used to yield crude carpaine material. Further purificati­on steps produces solid carpaine that is at least 95 per cent pure.

At the end of the three-year project, the team hopes to have developed the best processing method to achieve the highest yield of carpaine.

Other aims are to find out how the carpaine degrades during storage and which parts of the papaya plant are best to use.

The challenge will eventually be to find adequate supply sources of papaya leaf because there are not many large papaya farms in Malaysia and existing farms do not harvest the leaves as their priority is to grow papaya fruit.

Eventually the researcher­s aim to work with industry partners in Malaysia and beyond to produce a carpaine medication. They anticipate the product could take at least 10 years to bring to market because extensive approvals and clinical trials are needed.

In this blog, the University of Nottingham’s very own Provost and chief executive officer at the Malaysia campus, Professor Graham Kendall, tells how he became seriously ill with dengue after being bitten by a mosquito near his home in Kuala Lumpur.

 ??  ?? A Sri Lankan researcher Dr Sanath Hettige who pointed out in 2008 that the vital power of Papaya leaf extract to treat Dengue fever.
A Sri Lankan researcher Dr Sanath Hettige who pointed out in 2008 that the vital power of Papaya leaf extract to treat Dengue fever.

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