{"id":1564,"date":"2015-09-08T22:00:46","date_gmt":"2015-09-09T02:00:46","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/cancerawarenessnews.com\/?p=1564"},"modified":"2015-10-08T19:02:13","modified_gmt":"2015-10-08T23:02:13","slug":"what-amphibians-venom-cures-cancer-new-discovery","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/cancerawarenessnews.com\/what-amphibians-venom-cures-cancer-new-discovery\/","title":{"rendered":"What Amphibian’s Venom Cures Cancer….new discovery!"},"content":{"rendered":"

VIDEO: Amazing cancer cure video. Watch video below<\/h3>\n

It\u2019s hoped that, depending upon funding, a system could be devised within three years to turn the venom into a tablet form that could be sold to the multi-billion dollar Chinese traditional medicine market. They may be Australia\u2019s most hated pest, routinely clubbed to death by the public, but their venom could soon prove an unlikely source of income \u2013 as an export commodity to China. READ MORE<\/strong><\/p>\n

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Researchers at the University of Queensland have discovered that a certain amphibian’s\u00a0venom is effective in fighting cancer, with the potency rivaling that of venomous amphibians found in Asia that are used in Chinese traditional medicine.<\/p>\n

KEEP READING ARTICLE & WATCH FASCINATING VIDEO ON NEXT PAGE<\/strong><\/p>\n

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VIDEO: Amazing cancer cure video.<\/h3>\n

The discovery opens up the possibility of sending millions of cane toads from Australia to China, where they would be systematically squeezed for their juices, which would then be mixed with herbs and consumed as medicine.<\/p>\n

Harendra Parekh, from the university\u2019s school of pharmacy, said Chinese companies were \u201cqueuing up\u201d to get their hands on Australia\u2019s cane toads.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe don\u2019t have any of the environmental pollution, such as heavy metal poisoning, that you see in China,\u201d he told Guardian Australia. \u201cSo the Chinese see cane toads as living in a clean environment that doesn\u2019t impact upon their venom.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe could process the venom for medicine, ideally in a tablet because it tastes absolutely awful if you drink it. Look at lamb, beef and chicken \u2013 these Australian products are seen as premium goods in China. Cane toads would be no different. They\u2019d be premium cane toads.\u201d<\/p>\n

The university has been working on cane toad venom as a cancer treatment since 2010, when former PhD student Jing Jing discovered that the poison killed cancerous prostate cells while sparing healthy cells.<\/p>\n

\u201cUltimately, labour costs are cheaper in China than here, so we may sell the technology for the tablet and then in order to meet the demand, collect the toads and ship them there,\u201d Parekh said.<\/p>\n

A further possibility could be to target other forms of cancer with the venom, potentially opening up an avenue to medicine that could be sold to other countries. Currently, toads are predominantly used in Chinese medicine.<\/p>\n

Cane toads are considered one of Australia\u2019s worst invasive species, having been introduced in Queensland in 1935 in a misguided attempt to control the cane beetle.<\/p>\n

It is estimated there are now more than 200m cane toads in Australia, expanding their range at about 50km a year. The toads have marched across Queensland and the Northern Territory \u2013 with disastrous effects for native animals such as quolls, goannas and snakes – and are now invading the Kimberley.<\/p>\n

Parekh said venom was easily obtained from cane toads by simply squeezing them and collecting it from their glands.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou can do it while they are alive and venom from one toad can go a long way,\u201d he said. \u201cIt\u2019s very potent, which is why it causes problems if your dog simply licks the skin of a cane toad.<\/p>\n

\u201cThe cane toad is a pest here to stay and we are fighting a losing battle against it, but we could turn them into a lucrative export market.<\/p>\n

\u201cThere are many opportunities a cane toad can give us rather than just whacking them with bats. Why can\u2019t we turn them into something positive?\u201d<\/p>\n