Researchers have identified a wealth of therapeutic compounds in the husk of avocado seeds.
Researchers
found that avocado seed husks contain a variety of chemical compounds that
could help to kill viruses, combat heart problems, and even treat cancer.
Study
co-author Debasish Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D., of the Department of Chemistry at the
University of Texas Rio Grande Valley in Edinburg, and colleagues recently
reported their findings at the 254th National Meeting & Exposition of the
American Chemical Society, held in Washington, D.C.
Avocados
are fast becoming one of the United States' favorite fruits. According to the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, avocado consumption in the country has more
than doubled over the past decade, and we are now eating almost four times as
many avocados than we were in the mid-1990s.
The benefits of avocado
Given
the many health benefits associated with avocado intake, it is no wonder the
fruit has seen a rise in popularity.
A
study reported by Medical
News Today in 2015, for example, associated avocado intake with
lower levels of "bad" cholesterol in people who are overweight or
obese, while other research has linked avocado consumption with reduced risk of
metabolic syndrome.
Of
course, such benefits are based on the consumption of avocado flesh, since the
skin and seed of the fruit are usually discarded. The new study, however,
suggests that when we throw away the latter, we may be discarding the most
valuable component.
Dr.
Bandyopadhyay and colleagues came to their findings by grounding down around
300 dried avocado seed husks, which is the skin that coats the seeds.
The
grounding process resulted in 21 ounces of avocado seed husk powder. Further
processing of the powder resulted in three teaspoons of seed husk oil and just
over one teaspoon of seed husk wax.
The
team then used chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis to pinpoint the
chemical compounds present in the seed husk oil and wax.
Avocado seed husk: The 'gem of gems'?
In
total, the researchers identified 116 compounds in the avocado seed husk oil,
many of which could be beneficial to human health, and many of which could not
be found in the avocado seed itself.
Some
compounds of particular interest in the seed husk oil were behenyl alcohol,
dodecanoic acid, and heptacosane. Behenyl alcohol is used in antiviral medication,
dodecanoic acid is known to boost "good" cholesterol, and heptacosane
has shown promise for killing tumors.
Additionally,
the team identified compounds in avocado seed husk wax that are used as food
additives - such as butylated hydroxytoluene - and in cosmetic products,
including bis(2-butoxyethyl) phthalate.
The
researchers now plan to modify some of the chemical compounds they identified
in avocado seed husk oil, with the aim of developing new, safer medications.
"It
could very well be that avocado seed husks, which most people consider as the
waste of wastes, are actually the gem of gems because the medicinal compounds
within them could eventually be used to treat cancer.


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