Psoriasis Can Be Cured
A Simple ABOVE: Kigelia Africana — commonly known as the sausage tree

Millions suffer from psoriasis and spend billions of dollars treating and trying to cure this demoralizing skin condition. Medical experts say there is no cure, but the pod of an African tree contains a miraculous component that can reverse psoriasis. My belief is that while psoriasis is an unsightly, demoralizing disease, it CAN be cured.
What is Psoriasis?
Psoriasis is a disease that causes various types of inflammation and lesions on the skin that, at best, are sore and itchy, and at worst, unsightly, painful and disfiguring, sometimes debilitating. Its cause isn’t known, but it is considered to be an immunological condition, and there are a number of typical triggers including stress and infection. Because of the social stigma, sufferers usually try to cover it up – but it is not contagious.
It is generally agreed by the medical fraternity that there is no cure for psoriasis. But there are people whose psoriasis has been cured, or at least forced into long-term remission, including mine. The very unlikely cure-source is the pod of the African sausage tree, Kigelia Africana that has also been found to be “active” against skin cancer, fungal infection, eczema, and other skin problems.
Real-Life Experiences
As a journalist, I know that psoriasis is a condition that has had sufferers screaming for help for a very long time. As a medical problem that relates to the immune system, it tends to attack the body and then never leave.
My own introduction to the problem was via a larger than life, hugely successful (PR for an international hotel group) friend who had a child in the same class as my oldest son. I couldn’t see her condition, and nor could anyone else –— unless she chose to show them. But as I got to know her, she confided that she had been to the Dead Sea to try and cure the disease, and was terribly frustrated that even that hadn’t helped for more than a short while.
She showed me the skin condition that was hidden by her clothes. It was awful, and all I could do was empathize. Little did I realize that I too would cross swords with psoriasis, and discover first hand what an ugly disease it actually is.
Understanding Psoriasis
The US National Institute of Health (NIH) describes psoriasis as a non-contagious immune system problem that normally occurs in adults and sometimes recurs in families. The process, it explains, is an extremely rapid “cell turnover” that causes the cells deep in the skin to rise to the surface within days. This process would normally take about a month. Causes, they say, can be anything from medication or stress, to infection or even simply dry skin conditions.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) describes psoriasis as “a chronic autoimmune skin disease that speeds up the growth cycle of skin cells.” Identifying it as a serious public health problem, the CDC began focusing on psoriasis in 2010, which at that stage was estimated to affect about 6.7 million adult Americans. Two years later, the CDC published an “analysis” that stated amongst other things that psoriasis was “significantly associated with” both smoking and obesity. However, the published paper, What is Psoriasis, stated that there was a need for further research.
At this point I should add that I have never smoked or been obese.
WHO Says It’s a Painful, Incurable Disease
The World Health Organisation (WHO) reported at its 67th World Health Assembly in May 2014 that psoriasis was “a chronic, noncommunicable, painful, disfiguring, and disabling disease for which there is no cure”.
It also stated that people suffering from psoriasis were more at risk for various co-morbid conditions including obesity, diabetes, stroke and various cardiovascular diseases, ulcerative colitis and liver disease. Further, the report said, as many as 42% of psoriasis sufferers would develop psoriatic arthritis that would at very least cause pain, swelling and stiffness, and at worst would develop into permanent disability and disfigurement.
“Too many people in the world suffer needlessly from psoriasis due to incorrect or delayed diagnosis, inadequate treatment options and insufficient access to care.” WHO
So, how could there possibly be a cure for this supposedly incurable condition? I believe the key is in the very words of WHO. After all, quick diagnosis and proper treatment is the key to just about any cure for disease.
I know from personal experience that Kigelia is an underestimated source for treating skin diseases. More than a decade after the “after” photograph featured below, the psoriasis I suffer from has not recurred
My Psoriasis
Although a reasonably ardent believer in alternative medicine, when I realized I had developed a chronic skin condition that was probably psoriasis, I went to a general practitioner. When the expensive skin medications he prescribed failed to make any difference to the condition, I realized I would probably have to go to a specialist dermatologist. But first I did some serious research — and it paid off.
Clearly there is no agreement on what causes psoriasis in general, but the direct trigger for me was another skin condition that had resulted from a series of very unpleasant insect bites. It had happened before, and I knew immediately that the rash I had developed all over my body was from a mite that burrows into hay and straw. All I had done was to sit on a bale of contaminated hay! I immediately self-medicated with a parasiticide soap that contains five percent Monosulfiram, and is manufactured to prevent and treat a range of skin infections and rashes from severe eczema to scabies and head and body lice. It eased the itching, but didn’t clear the rash. I also used tried-and-tested calamine lotion and antihistamine cream for the itching.
It was some months later that I went to the doctor. The cream prescribed by him was very expensive and even less effective than the soap had been. After a repeat prescription, and still no results, I started my Internet search and found a relatively inexpensive, local (made-in-South-Africa where I live) product online that I later discovered was made from Kigelia Africana.
The Remedy I Discovered Cured My Psoriasis
It is totally natural and supplied as a colorless solution (that is sprayed on) and a lotion that is rubbed into the skin once the solution has dried. The Kigelia solution is absorbed into the skin and it starts to repair it at a cellular level, from beneath the skin, getting rid of toxins and harmful bacteria. Rather than keeping the skin moist (which several other remedies do), this particular treatment allows oxygen to get into the skin while it is kept as dry as possible. However patients are advised to use a nourishing skin cream to ensure the skin doesn’t dehydrate.


My personal experiment started in 2008, and it wasn’t quick. I wore long skirts and jeans 24:7 because my skin looked so horrible. While the original rash was all over my body, the resulting psoriasis was mainly on my legs. But it was when it started appearing under my arms and on my elbows, that I became seriously alarmed.
A Simple Solution
The solution and lotion seemed far too simple, but I persisted daily for more than two years … watching as it slowly started to abate.
However, a typical characteristic of psoriasis is that it is variable and tends to change its form. Even when it appears to abate, it might suddenly flare up … improve … even go into remission … and then flare up again.
In my case as the raised red skin on my legs shrunk, I began to get lesions on the palms of my hands. Atone stage they were so bad they were open and seeping. Eventually, by 2015, the inflammation on my legs and body had disappeared completely, and it never reappeared.
My hands eventually also cleared, though inflammation on them was triggered a few months later — but it only lasted for a few days.
Healed at last! July 19, 2015 — the day after my birthday — my legs were back to normal … and a decade later, the disease has not recurredOther Success Stories
The Kigelia Africana product I used was the brainchild of two long-term psoriasis sufferers. Brigitte Ramsay had suffered from the condition for 16 years, mostly triggered by stress when she discovered the plant extract. In 1997 she experimented on herself, and it took two months for the condition to vanish. Dr Joey Gobind, a general practitioner in Johannesburg, had also suffered for many years. He tried Brigitte’s original homemade remedy and started treating his patients with the same concoction. Then the pair got serious, trademarked their products and started a very low-key business, selling only via the Internet from February 1994. The business is still low-key, and they claim only to have enabled sufferers to go into remission, some, including Brigitte, permanently.
Most of the patients who have subsequently used their Kigelia Africana solution and lotion had previously tried cortisone creams and other prescription medicines. Photographs and testimonials on their website tell the story.
But theirs is not the only product that works both to reverse psoriasis and inhibit chronic skin conditions. As long ago as 1995, a British study by a Kings College, London biochemist. Dr Peter Houghton, found that an extract from Kigelia was able to counter skin cancer and melanoma cells. Researchers have also found that the plant has antifungal and antibacterial properties, amongst other things.
Kigelia Africana and Its Medicinal Uses
Common throughout Zimbabwe, Zambia, Malawi and other parts of southern Africa, the sausage tree is quite a plain-looking tree, except for its extraordinary sausage-shaped fruit that is huge. Not only do the enormous pods weigh a lot, they are also almost impossible to cut.
Various parts of the tree, including the pod, are commonly used for traditional African medicine for just about anything from treating constipation and gynecological disorders, to sores and snake bites.
Recent research, published in 2023, discusses the traditional uses of Kigelia.
“The phytochemical analysis of Kigelia africana subsp. africana has revealed the presence of approximately 145 compounds extracted from different parts of the plant. These bioactive extracts of the plant possess anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antimicrobial, antidiabetic, antineoplastic, and anti-urolithic activities. Due to its anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immune-booster properties, Kigelia can prove to be an essential source of drugs for treating various disorders.”
Traditional Uses of Kilgelia africana
As I have said, Kigelia africana, commonly known as the “sausage tree,” is an underestimated source for treating skin diseases due to its rich phytochemical profile, which includes anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antimicrobial properties. Traditional African medicine has long used Kigelia to address conditions like eczema, impetigo, acne, and fungal infections, as well as for wound healing and skin rejuvenation by stimulating collagen production.
Here’s a rundown of traditional uses:
Anti-Inflammatory and Soothing
Kigelia extracts, particularly containing verminoside, have shown significant anti-inflammatory effects by inhibiting inflammatory enzymes. This makes it beneficial for soothing irritated skin conditions like psoriasis and eczema
Antimicrobial and Antifungal
The plant’s bark and leaves are traditionally used to treat infections, including ringworm and athlete’s foot, and a broad-spectrum antimicrobial cream can be made from its stem bark. Phytochemicals like flavonoids and phenolic acids contribute to these antimicrobial properties by interfering with microbial growth.
Wound Healing and Skin Rejuvenation
Kigelia extracts promote wound healing by supporting the skin’s complex and regulated healing process. Additionally, the plant’s ability to stimulate collagen production helps to firm the skin and reduce fine lines, contributing to overall skin rejuvenation.
Antioxidant Properties
Compounds found in Kigelia, such as flavonoids and phenolic acids, act as antioxidants, helping to protect the skin from damage caused by reactive oxygen species and oxidative stress.
Research Continues
Research continues all over the world in an attempt to learn more about the magical properties of Kigelia. One open-access research paper published by MDPI in 2020, contains a mountain of information, albeit very academic, that is based on 125 “relevant international literature sources.”
Their focus is on traditional uses of Kigelia africana and they advise, “For a brighter future of medicinal plant research, researchers should embrace a high-throughput analysis before coming to conclusions concerning the biological activity of medicinal plants. This is because a high-throughput analysis combines genomics, proteomics and chemical and ultrastructural data.”
They also state, “Kigelia africana has been used in the management of human ailments since time immemorial. Ethnobotanists have documented the traditional uses of K. africana, which include treatment of skin disorders, cancer and gynecological complaints, among others. This has interested scientists, who have examined K. africana plant parts for their bioactivity. This review provides an insightful understanding on the ethnobotany, phytochemistry and pharmacology of K. africana.”
“Whilst the fruits are most often cited in pharmacological studies, other plant parts are also used in herbal preparations. Commercially available products have been formulated from K. africana, though many have not been fully standardized. Despite many efforts by researchers to scientifically validate traditional uses of K. africana, many remain merely claims, thus the need to conduct more research, scientifically validate other traditional uses, isolate new bioactive phytochemicals and standardize K. africana products.”
Let’s hope that happens in a way that will make the active phytochemicals found in Kigelia available and accessible to everyone wanting to try what I believe is potentially a miracle cure!

