ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Soursop Leaf Tea: How to Make It, Traditional Uses, and What Science Actually Says

That viral post about boiling 10 soursop leaves for 7 minutes is everywhere right now. The claim is that it eliminates cancer cells, fixes poor circulation, swollen feet, and blood sugar. Soursop, also called graviola or guanábana, is a real tropical fruit with a long history in traditional medicine, and the leaf tea is popular in the Caribbean, West Africa, and Southeast Asia. Here is what soursop leaf tea actually is, how people prepare it, what the research shows so far, and the safety issues you need to know before trying it.

What Is Soursop

Soursop is Annona muricata, a spiky green fruit with soft white pulp. It tastes like a mix of pineapple, strawberry, and citrus. The fruit is eaten fresh, made into juice, smoothies, and ice cream.

The leaves are different from the fruit. In traditional herbal practice, dried soursop leaves are boiled to make a tea. It has an earthy, slightly bitter taste, similar to green tea. This is what the viral image is referring to, not the fruit pulp.

Traditional Uses of Soursop Leaf Tea

In folk medicine, soursop leaf tea has been used for generations as a calming bedtime tea, for digestive comfort, and general wellness support. In some regions it is used as a traditional tonic for inflammation and blood sugar management.

These are traditional uses, not proven medical treatments. There is a big difference between centuries of folk use and clinical evidence in humans.

What Does the Science Say

This is the important part. Lab studies, usually in test tubes and in animals, have found compounds in soursop leaves called annonaceous acetogenins. In lab conditions, these compounds have shown activity against certain cancer cell lines.

That does NOT mean soursop leaf tea eliminates cancer cells in people. There are zero large, high-quality human clinical trials showing soursop cures or treats cancer, poor circulation, swollen feet, or diabetes. Lab results rarely translate directly to the human body, and the doses used in labs are far higher than what you get from tea.

Major cancer organizations state clearly: do not use soursop as a cancer treatment, and do not replace any prescribed medication with it. If you have cancer, diabetes, circulation issues, or swelling in your feet, talk to your doctor. Those symptoms need proper medical evaluation.

Soursop leaf tea is best viewed as an herbal tea, similar to chamomile or hibiscus, not a drug.

How to Make Soursop Leaf Tea the Traditional Way

For Complete Cooking STEPS Please Head On Over To Next Page Or Open button (>) and don’t forget to SHARE with your Facebook friends

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

Leave a Comment