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Eurycoma Longifolia the Amazing Aphrodisiac Herb
Description
Eurycoma
longifolia (Simaroubaceae) is a small tree to 15
m high. Plants dioecious (flowers on a plant are
either male or female). Leaves compound, long,
and crowded at the tips of the branches. When
the leaves fall they leave large scars on the
stems. Leaflets are ovate-lanceolate, sessile or
nearly so, and opposite. Flowers are borne in
axillaries panicles, mostly large and lax, and
puberulous with short hairs. Flowers are
unisexual; male flower has sterile pistil,
female flower has sterile stamens. Fruits
ellipsoid or ovoid, 10-20 x 5-12 mm, green to
blackish-red when ripe.
Ecology
E. longifolia
prefers acid and sandy soils at low altitude up
to 700 m above sea level. Plants usually grow in
beach forests, primary and secondary forests,
mixed dipterocarp forests and also in heath
forests. In Riau Province, Sumatra, 1991, the
author found that plants were growing in areas
with an average temperature of 25C and 86%
humidity. The soils in this area were found to
be poor in nutrients, but mycorrhizal fungi were
found growing near the plants and may indicate
an association. Seedlings require shade, during
which time they develop an extensive root system.
Following juvenile stages, plants need stronger
light to develop vegetative and reproductive
parts. E. longifolia flowers and fruits
throughout the year, with peak flowering from
June-July and peak fruiting in September.
Distribution
E. longifolia
originates from South East Asia, including
Indonesia, Malay Peninsula, Thailand, Laos,
Cambodia and Vietnam. In Indonesia, this species
only occurs naturally in Sumatra and Kalimantan.
Uses
Though E.
longifolia is currently mostly known as an
aphrodisiac, in South East Asia, all parts of E.
longifolia plants have long been used
medicinally. The plant is commonly used
throughout the region as a tonic after
childbirth. The bark of the roots is used in the
Malay Peninsula to cure fever, ulcers in the
mouth, and intestinal worms. The Malays also use
the paste of the plant to relieve headache,
stomachache, pain caused by syphilis, and many
other general pains. In parts of Sumatra and
Kalimantan, the root is used as an anit-pyretic.
In Lampung and Belitung it is used as a medicine
for dysentery. The people of Sabah and
Kalimantan make a decoction of the bark that is
drunk to relieve pain in the bones or applied
for washing itches. In Vietnam, people use the
flowers and fruits as a medicine for treating
dysentery. In Riau, where the author carried out
research, people living in the surrounding
forests boil the root or stem to cure malaria.
One of the most unique uses for E. longifolia is
that of the Sakai ethnic group in Sumatra who
use the plant as an amulet to protect people
from the smallpox virus.
Phytochemistry
The active constituents in
E. longifolia, and many other species in the
Family Simaroubaceae, include quassin, neo-quassin,
glaukarubin, sedrin, eurycomanol that are mostly
derivatives from compounds with 20 carbon atoms.

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