agar agar

Parts used: thallus (thallus) algae.

Pharmacy name: agar (formerly: agar-agar).

Botanical description. The red algae Gelidium amansii is found and harvested along the Pacific coast of Asia from the Greater Sunda Islands to Japan, along the Pacific coast of Mexico and California and the coast of the Indian Ocean. This is an openwork, extremely delicate branched plant, reaching a length of about 20-24 cm.

Collection and preparation.Algae is extracted from the seabed from May to September by divers using nets or special rakes and thoroughly washed with fresh water from dirt and small organisms, which are traditionally found in abundance on the surface of seaweed. For subsequent bleaching, the collected material is laid out on bedding, where it is often washed with fresh water and dried, turning over all the time. Dried algae *In Russia, ahnfeltia (Ahnfeltia plicata [Huds.] Fries) from the family Phyllophoraceae is of the greatest importance as a producer of agar-agar. – Approx. translations are traditionally stored in warehouses for some time before they are actually processed into agar. To do this, they are moistened again and boiled in large vats of water. After adding the acid, it is boiled again, with all this, the jelly-forming substances dissolve, and they are strained from the remaining sediment. Agar is isolated by freezing, after thawing it is a leathery-leafy mass. Then it is dried again, and the product is ready for use.

Active ingredients: 70% carbohydrates, proteins, coarse fiber and water.

Healing action and application. Swelling substances of pharmaceutical raw materials do not decompose either in the acidic environment of the stomach, through which they pass very quickly, or in the alkaline environment of the intestines, and as a result of strong swelling, they increase the contents of the intestines, which causes its peristalsis. Thus, agar-agar acts as a mild laxative. But as a medicine, as the main component of vaginal balls or suppositories, it is not currently used. On the contrary, biologists widely use agar as the basis of nutrient media for growing cells and microorganisms.

Side effects are unknown. The use of agar-agar as a mild laxative is safe.