ok.. ni ada satu petua bagaimana nak hilangkan sakit cekam atau cagu iaitu dengan menggunakan inai..atau nama saintifiknya Lawsonia Inermis...tahu daun inai............ ha tahu takpe....nasib baik tahu,..hehehe..
Ambil segenggam daun inai dan tumbuk hingga lumat. dah lumat....jgn korang letak kat semua jari...tu orang nak menikah je yang buat....hihi...
Kemudian ambil daun inai lumat tu pakaikan pada ibu jari kaki yang sakit membengkak tadi. Biarkan sehingga daun inai kering dan ulangi lagi selepas beberapa hari jika perlu. khasiat daun inai dipercayai mampu mengubat sakit cekam kuku.
Apa itu inai
Inai atau nama saintifiknya Lawsonia Inermis adalah sejenis pokok yang mempunyai khasiat dan nilai perubatan yang tinggi terutamanya bahagian daunnya. Pokok inai yang mempunyai banyak ranting ini mendapat namanya daripada perkataan Arab ‘Hina’ yang bermaksud ubat.
Ahli sejarah mendakwa bahawa orang orang Mongol telah membawa inai ke India pada kurun ke-12 sementara pihak lain mendakwa inai berasal dari India. Ahli arkeologi pula mengatakan mereka menemui bukti bahawa inai telah digunakan oleh orang Mesir dalam proses menghasilkan mumia apabila mereka mendapati kuku jari dan kaki mumia yang mereka temui disapu dengan sejenis pewarna merah yang dipercayai adalah inai.
Daun inai mengandungi bahan pewarna glukosid dan asid henotanik. Asid henotanik pada daun inai menyebabkan kulit yang disapu inai akan berwarna merah. Ini disebabkan pewarna yang sememangnya terdapat dalam asid henotanik akan bergabung dengan kolagen pada sel kulit dan keratin pada kuku dan rambut. Minyak daripada biji inai mengandungi behenik, arasidik, sterik, palmitik, asid oleik dan linoleik.
sumber:pesonabatik.comAhli sejarah mendakwa bahawa orang orang Mongol telah membawa inai ke India pada kurun ke-12 sementara pihak lain mendakwa inai berasal dari India. Ahli arkeologi pula mengatakan mereka menemui bukti bahawa inai telah digunakan oleh orang Mesir dalam proses menghasilkan mumia apabila mereka mendapati kuku jari dan kaki mumia yang mereka temui disapu dengan sejenis pewarna merah yang dipercayai adalah inai.
Daun inai mengandungi bahan pewarna glukosid dan asid henotanik. Asid henotanik pada daun inai menyebabkan kulit yang disapu inai akan berwarna merah. Ini disebabkan pewarna yang sememangnya terdapat dalam asid henotanik akan bergabung dengan kolagen pada sel kulit dan keratin pada kuku dan rambut. Minyak daripada biji inai mengandungi behenik, arasidik, sterik, palmitik, asid oleik dan linoleik.
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Henna (Lawsonia inermis, also called henna tree) is a flowering plant used since antiquity to dye skin, hair, fingernails, leather and wool. The name is also used for dye preparations derived from the plant, and for the art of temporary tattooing based on those dyes. Additionally, the name is misused for other skin and hair dyes, such as black henna or neutral henna, which are not derived from the plant.
The English name "henna" comes from the Arabic حِنَّاء (ALA-LC: ḥinnāʾ / pronounced [ħɪnˈnæːʔ]) or colloquially حنا, loosely pronounced /ħinna/
The English name "henna" comes from the Arabic حِنَّاء (ALA-LC: ḥinnāʾ / pronounced [ħɪnˈnæːʔ]) or colloquially حنا, loosely pronounced /ħinna/
Description
Henna is a tall shrub or small tree, 2.6 m high. It is glabrous, multibranched with spine tipped branchlets. Leaves are opposite, entire, glabrous, sub-sessile, elliptical, and broadly lanceolate (1.5–5.0 cm x 0.5–2 cm), acuminate, having depressed veins on the dorsal surface. Henna flowers have four sepals and a 2 mm calyx tube with 3 mm spread lobes. Petals are obvate, white or red stamens inserted in pairs on the rim of the calyx tube. Ovary is four celled, style up to 5 mm long and erect. Fruits are small, brownish capsules, 4–8 mm in diameter, with 32–49 seeds per fruit, and open irregularly into four splits.
Cultivation
The henna plant is native to tropical and subtropical regions of Africa, southern Asia, and northern Australasia in semi-arid zones. Henna's indigenous zone is the tropical savannah and tropical arid zone, in latitudes between 15° and 25° N and S from Africa to the western Pacific rim, and produces highest dye content in temperatures between 35 °C and 45 °C. During the onset of precipitation intervals, the plant grows rapidly; putting out new shoots, then growth slows. The leaves gradually yellow and fall during prolonged dry or cool intervals. It does not thrive where minimum temperatures are below 11 °C. Temperatures below 5 °C will kill the henna plant. Henna is commercially cultivated in Morocco, Algeria, Yemen, Tunisia, Libya, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, India, Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, Turkey, Somalia and Sudan. Presently the Pali district of Rajasthan is the most heavily cultivated henna production area in India, with over 100 henna processors operating in Sojat City.
Uses
Henna has been used since the Bronze Age to dye skin (including body art), hair, fingernails, leather, silk and wool. In several parts of the world it is traditionally used in various festivals and celebrations. There is mention of henna as a hair dye in Indian court records around 400 CE, in Rome during the Roman Empire, and in Spain during Convivencia.It was listed in the medical texts of the Ebers Papyrus (16th c BCE Egypt) and by Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (14th c CE (Syria and Egypt) as a medicinal herb.In Morocco, wool is dyed and ornamented with henna, as are drumheads and other leather goods.Lawsone, an active compound in Henna
Use of henna for body art has enjoyed a recent renaissance due to improvements in cultivation, processing, and the emigration of people from traditional henna-using regions.
For skin dyeing, a paste of ground henna (either prepared from a dried powder or from fresh ground leaves) is placed in contact with the skin from a few hours to overnight. Henna stains can last a few days to a month depending on the quality of the paste, individual skin type, and how long the paste is allowed to stay on the skin.
Henna also acts as an anti-fungal and a preservative for leather and cloth.
Henna flowers have been used to create perfume since ancient times, and henna perfume is experiencing a resurgence. Henna repels some insect pests and mildew.
Henna's coloring properties are due to lawsone, a burgundy organic compound that has an affinity for bonding with protein. Lawsone is primarily concentrated in the leaves, especially in the petioles of the leaf. Lawsone content in leaves is negatively correlated with the number of seeds in the fruits.
Uses
Henna has been used since the Bronze Age to dye skin (including body art), hair, fingernails, leather, silk and wool. In several parts of the world it is traditionally used in various festivals and celebrations. There is mention of henna as a hair dye in Indian court records around 400 CE, in Rome during the Roman Empire, and in Spain during Convivencia.It was listed in the medical texts of the Ebers Papyrus (16th c BCE Egypt) and by Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya (14th c CE (Syria and Egypt) as a medicinal herb.In Morocco, wool is dyed and ornamented with henna, as are drumheads and other leather goods.Lawsone, an active compound in Henna
Use of henna for body art has enjoyed a recent renaissance due to improvements in cultivation, processing, and the emigration of people from traditional henna-using regions.
For skin dyeing, a paste of ground henna (either prepared from a dried powder or from fresh ground leaves) is placed in contact with the skin from a few hours to overnight. Henna stains can last a few days to a month depending on the quality of the paste, individual skin type, and how long the paste is allowed to stay on the skin.
Henna also acts as an anti-fungal and a preservative for leather and cloth.
Henna flowers have been used to create perfume since ancient times, and henna perfume is experiencing a resurgence. Henna repels some insect pests and mildew.
Henna's coloring properties are due to lawsone, a burgundy organic compound that has an affinity for bonding with protein. Lawsone is primarily concentrated in the leaves, especially in the petioles of the leaf. Lawsone content in leaves is negatively correlated with the number of seeds in the fruits.
source: wikipedia.


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