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Apples Could Reduce
Risk Of Breast Cancer
An apple a day can help keep breast cancer away, according to
a study in rats by food scientists at Cornell University.
"We found that tumor incidence was reduced by 17, 39 and 44 percent
in rats fed the human equivalent of one, three or six apples a
day, respectively, over 24 weeks," says Rui Hai Liu, Cornell associate
professor of food science and lead author of the study.
The Cornell researchers treated a group of rats with a known
mammary carcinogen and then fed them either whole apple extracts
or control extracts. Liu, who says this is the first study of
the effects of apples on cancer prevention in animals, also found
that the number of tumors was reduced by 25, 25 and 61 percent
in rats fed, respectively, the equivalent of one, three or six
apples a day.
The report is published online at http://pubs.acs.org/cgi-bin/abstract.cgi/jafcau/asap/abs/jf058010c.html
and will be published later this month in theJournal of Agricultural
and Food Chemistry .
In an article in the journal Nature five years ago, Liu
and his colleagues credited phytochemicals -- antioxidants --
in fresh apples with inhibiting human liver and colon cancer cell
growth. Antioxidants help prevent cancer by mopping up cell-damaging
free radicals and inhibiting the production of reactive substances
that could damage normal cells.
"Studies increasingly provide evidence that it is the additive
and synergistic effects of the phytochemicals present in fruits
and vegetables that are responsible for their potent antioxidant
and anticancer activities," Liu says.
"Our findings suggest that consumers may gain more significant
health benefits by eating more fruits and vegetables and whole
grain foods than in consuming expensive dietary supplements, which
do not contain the same array of balanced, complex components,"
says Liu.
He notes that the thousands of phytochemicals in foods vary in
molecular size, polarity and solubility, which could affect how
they are absorbed and distributed in different cells, tissues
and organs. "This balanced natural combination of phytochemicals
present in fruits and vegetables cannot simply be mimicked by
dietary supplements," he explains.
Furthermore, Liu notes that the health benefits of consuming
fruits and vegetables extend beyond lowering the risk of developing
cancers and cardiovascular diseases to include preventive
effects for other chronic diseases, such as cataracts, age-related
macular degeneration, central neurodegenerative disease and diabetes.
Says David R. Jacobs, professor in the Division of Epidemiology,
School of Public Health, University of Minnesota: "Dr. Liu is
in the forefront of a group of investigators, including myself,
who find extensive evidence that extremely important health aspects
of food work through the combination of substances that make up
that food, a concept we call food synergy. Risk of many chronic
diseases in modern life appears to be reduced by whole foods,
but not by isolated large doses of selected food compounds. Dr.
Liu's current work on apples and breast tumors in rats is a perfect
example of this principle."
Reference
Source 125
March 2, 2005
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