A common
weed could help cure skin cancers, claim
researchers. The sap from a plant known
as petty spurge or milkweed
- found by roadsides and in woodland - can
'kill' certain types of cancer cells when
applied to the skin.
It works
on non-melanoma skin cancers, which
affect hundreds of thousands of Britons
each year. They are triggered by sun damage
and, although not usually fatal, can be
disfiguring without treatment.
The plant has been used for centuries as
a traditional folk medicine to treat conditions
such as warts, asthma and several types
of cancer. But
for the first time a team of scientists
in Australia has carried out a clinical
study of sap from Euphorbia peplus, which
is related to Euphorbia plants grown in
gardens in the UK.
The study
of 36 patients with a total of 48 non-melanoma
lesions included basal cell carcinomas (BCC),
squamous cell carcinomas (SCC) and intraepidermal
carcinomas (IEC), a growth of cancerous
cells confined to the outer layer of the
skin.
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