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Faculty Scholarship for the College of Science & Mathematics

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Tea

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Full-Text Articles in Medicinal and Pharmaceutical Chemistry

Components In Aqueous Hibiscus Rosa-Sinensis Flower Extract Inhibit In Vitro Melanoma Cell Growth, Karina H. Goldberg, Ariel C. Yin, Archana Mupparapu, Edward P. Retzbach, Gary S. Goldberg, Catherine F. Yang Jan 2017

Components In Aqueous Hibiscus Rosa-Sinensis Flower Extract Inhibit In Vitro Melanoma Cell Growth, Karina H. Goldberg, Ariel C. Yin, Archana Mupparapu, Edward P. Retzbach, Gary S. Goldberg, Catherine F. Yang

Faculty Scholarship for the College of Science & Mathematics

Skin cancer is extremely common, and melanoma causes about 80% of skin cancer deaths. In fact, melanoma kills over 50 thousand people around the world each year, and these numbers are rising. Clearly, standard treatments are not effectively treating melanoma, and alternative therapies are needed to address this problem. Hibiscus tea has been noted to have medicinal properties, including anticancer effects. Extracts from Hibiscus have been shown to inhibit the growth of a variety of cancer cells. In particular, recent studies found that polyphenols extracted from Hibiscus sabdariffa by organic solvents can inhibit melanoma cell growth. However, effects of aqueous …