Popular vegetable can help prepare a cure for Kala Azar
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology, Guwahati used Sechium edule or Chayote (Chow-Chow in Hindi) to prepare nanosilver particles that proved toxic to Leishmania dovovani that causes Kala Azar





















































The researchers tested toxicity of nanosilver on Leishmania donovani grown in the lab. A solution containing just 50 micrograms of nanosilver per ml was sufficient to kill almost half of all parasites. Moreover, the concentration was nearly one and a half times more effective when compared with drugs currently in use. Tests on monocytes, a part of blood, showed that nanosilver particles were not mortal to monocytes even at double the concentration that was potent to kill all Leishmania thus demonstrating its safety to humans.







