Multiple Protective Effects Against Solar
Radiation
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One of the first clinical studies sought to
find out if Polypodium leucotomos extract,
applied topically or ingested orally, could
protect against solar radiation damage.21
An initial study was conducted on 21
volunteers, 13 of whom were pre-treated with a
light-sensitizing agent. All the volunteers were
exposed to solar radiation.21
The researchers recorded the following clinical
effects of sunlight on the subjects’ skin:
1. Measures of sunburn
2. Pigment changes
3. Cell injury.
The study subjects then took either an oral
extract of Polypodium leucotomos or applied it
topically and underwent another period of sun
exposure.
After repeating the same clinical
measurements of sun damage, the researchers
found that both topical and oral treatments were
effective in protecting against the sun’s rays.
Particularly impressive were findings that
following treatment, the amount of sunlight that
subjects could tolerate before experiencing any
reddening of the skin was increased nearly
three-fold.21
In fact, some subjects in the group given the
light-sensitizing agent experienced nearly
a seven-fold increase in the amount
of light their skin could tolerate
before cell damage occurred. Microscopic studies
of the skin showed that vital cancer-fighting
immune cells—called Langerhans’ cells—were
preserved by the fern treatment as well.21
Dr González’s research had created an oral form
of sun protection—something that was previously
thought to have been impossible.
Controlled Study Verifies Initial Findings
To further assess the effectiveness of this
special fern, researchers conducted a study
where one group received the oral Polypodium
leucotomos extracts, while the other group
received no treatment.12
Study subjects were healthy, but had fair to
light skin, making them more vulnerable to sun
damage. The active group was administered the
fern extract (7.5 mg/kg body weight), a dose
that translates to 525 mg for a typical
154-pound person.
Both groups were then directly exposed to
varying doses of artificial ultraviolet
radiation. At 24 hours after radiation exposure,
the skin-reddening reaction was assessed. The
scientists also took skin biopsies for
comparison of treated and untreated skin.
The results showed that treated subjects who
ingested the Polypodium fern extract experienced
a significant decrease in skin reddening.
Microscopically, the biopsies taken from the
treated subjects showed a significant decrease
in the “sunburn cells” that indicate ultraviolet
light-induced tissue injury, as well as a
reduction in the kind of molecular damage to DNA
that initiates cancer. There was also a
reduction in the infiltration of cells that lead
to age-related changes in the skin.
Additionally, as with the other study, the vital
Langerhans’ cancer-patrolling immune cells were
protected.12
Based on all these impressive results, the
researchers concluded,
“Oral
administration of Polypodium leucotomos is an
effective systemic chemophotoprotective agent
leading to significant UV protection of skin.”
Oral Fern Extracts Protect Against Medical
Radiation
The same research group next explored whether
these special fern extracts might benefit very
light-skinned patients undergoing medically
induced radiation therapy to the skin.22
This is an important concern, because this
treatment in fair-skinned people is often of
limited use due to painful side effects and
possible long-term increase in cancer risk.16
In this study, 10 fair-skinned people were
first exposed to a light-sensitizing agent
followed by high-intensity ultraviolet light
therapy. The researchers measured the effects of
this medical radiation therapy alone and also
when the oral Polypodium leuco-tomos
extracts were ingested.
Skin damage observed 48 to 72 hours after
this radiation therapy was lower in patients who
ingested Polypodium extracts. There was also
significantly less skin damage four months
later. As with the previous studies, there was a
significant reduction in sunburn cells and a
marked preservation of the Langerhans’ cells.22
Protecting Against “Sun-Poisoning”
In addition to sunburn, some people suffer
from skin lesions (idiopathic photodermatoses)
that are often referred to as “sun poisoning.”
In 2007, a group of Italian researchers studied
oral fern extracts as photoprotectants in a
group of 25 sufferers of these conditions.23
The researchers first ensured that their
subjects had not used any ultraviolet
light-protecting sunscreens. The subjects were
then exposed to sunlight during daily oral
supplementation with 480 mg of Polypodium
leucotomos fern extracts. The patients’
responses were compared with those they had
previously experienced during ultraviolet light
exposure without supplementation.
The findings showed a dramatic reduction in
immune-associated skin reactions and symptoms
(itching and discomfort) after taking the fern
extracts. All patients, as in the other studies,
tolerated the Polypodium leucotomos fern
extracts without side effects of any kind.
Scientists have shown that Polypodium
leucotomos is a very good antioxidant that works
at least partially by quenching free radicals.20,24,25
But there are plenty of potent antioxidants that
have not been shown to protect the skin against
radiation damage.
What is unique about this Polypodium fern is
that after oral ingestion, it seems to have
strong affinity for the skin compared with most
standard antioxidants, a characteristic that
gives it a highly selective targeted action.
Polypodium leucotomos extracts also seem to
act as an ultraviolet-absorbing material that
filter out or block ultraviolet radiation. In
addition, these extracts have been shown to
inhibit protein-destroying skin enzymes that
decrease skin elasticity.13 With further study,
this property may yet prove to help delay the
visible skin aging effect of solar radiation
exposure.
These mechanisms help explain why in study
after study, Polypodium leucotomos extracts are
proving to decrease the consequences of acute
sun exposure such as redness, sunburn-cell
formation, and suppression of cancer-fighting
Langerhans’ cells.12
Intriguing research provides a rationale on
how Polypodium leucotomos extracts may protect
against cancer. These fern extracts reduce DNA
damage in skin cells produced by the dangerous
short-wavelength UVB radiation that is
associated with skin cancer.12,26
Dr. González notes, “Polypodium
leucotomos probably helps reduce DNA damage
indirectly by protecting the special enzymes
that repair DNA from oxidative damage of their
own.” The significance of this
finding is that this effect may allow for better
DNA repair and subsequently fewer mutations that
can initiate cancer.
In fact, Dr. González recently showed that
“Polypodium leucotomos inhibits the
UV radiation-induced conversion of one of the
skin’s most powerful antioxidant molecules into
a specific immune-suppressing molecule.”27
Suppressing this vital first line of defense is
just one of the many links in the chain in which
sunlight damage can lead to skin-cancer
development.
Protecting Against Other Sources of
Radiation
What of Polypodium leucotomos’s potential in
protecting against other forms of ionizing
radiation, such as that used in radiation
treatments for cancer? Regrettably, such studies
have not been performed yet.
We do know that radiation therapy causes an
enormous increase in the levels of free radicals
in the skin of the exposed area, and the use of
Polypodium leucotomos is likely to quench these
reactive oxygen species, thereby alleviating the
harsh side effects of such aggressive therapies.
It is also worth noting that Polypodium
leucotomos has a boosting effect on the immune
system,22
probably related to its protective effect on
radiation-sensitive Langerhans’ cells, which
constitute the first barrier of ‘cancer patrol’
on the skin.
The overriding concern, however, is whether
the unique effects of Polypodium leucotomos
would protect cancer cells against
radiation-induced destruction. Until more is
known about this, cancer patients undergoing
radiation therapy should probably not use
Polypodium supplements.
Benefits of Oral Instead of Topical
Polypodium Leucotomos
Orally ingesting Polypodium leucotomos
extracts
(fernblock)
provides some obvious advantages
compared with topical application. It protects
the entire skin surface, which would include the
mucous membranes and the scalp. It cannot be
rubbed off or removed by perspiring or bathing.
Also, most people apply only a fraction of the
amount of topical sunscreens that are truly
needed for uv protection, and don’t reapply them
nearly often enough. Oral Polypodium leucotomos
overcomes that limitation as well.
When encountering prolonged exposure to the
sun, oral Polypodium leucotomos
extracts
(fernblock)
should
be used in conjunction with a sunscreen. We must
emphasize that situations involving
extended/intense sun exposure still require the
use of both high-SPF sunscreens and oral
Polypodium leucotomos extracts.
While some people are meticulous enough to
apply sunscreen every day, we often feel the
intensity of the sun on our face, neck, and arms
and realize we neglected to apply sunscreen that
day. The advantage of Polypodium leucotomos
extract
(fernblock)
is that ingesting just one pill in the
morning should provide considerable uv protection daily, such as when
walking to and from our cars.
What is interesting is that based on the
research studies, it might be possible to take
just one Polypodium leucotomos extract
(fernblock)
capsule
and obtain uv protection against
age-accelerating/cancer-inducing solar rays that
same day!
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