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Black
Cohosh and Breast
Cancer a Dangerous Mix
The
herbal extract black cohosh may not be safe for women with breast
cancer or for women who may have undetected breast tumors.
That warning comes from a Duquesne
University study presented July 12 at the American Association
for Cancer Research annual meeting in Washington, D.C.
Black cohosh is one of the most
widely used alternative therapies for women with menopausal symptoms.
"Although it is unfortunate
to be eliminating another option for women needing therapies to
relieve menopausal symptoms, our findings suggest that women who
may be at high risk of having an undetected breast tumor, and
certainly those who do have breast cancer, should proceed with
great caution -- or simply avoid -- taking black cohosh until
we learn if there are ways to circumvent these adverse effects,"
lead researcher Vicki Davis says in a statement.
In research using mice, she and
her colleagues found evidence that suggests black cohosh used
at normal doses may promote cancer metastases in women with early
stage breast cancer.
The study found that in mice with
mammary tumors, black cohosh increased the number of tumors that
spread to the lung. But black cohosh did not seem to increase
the risk of the mice actually developing mammary tumors.
For 12 months, the mice received
amounts of black cohosh comparable to a woman ingesting 40 milligrams
a day, the amount normally recommended to treat menopausal symptoms.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about black
cohosh.
Reference
Source 101
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