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Chemicals found in broccoli, cabbage, bok choy, and other cruciferous
vegetables may protect against lung cancer, according to a new study
conducted jointly with US and Chinese researchers.
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Researchers studied more than 18,000 men.
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They recorded 259 cases of lung cancer during the study's follow-up
period.
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They found that the men with detectable amounts of chemicals
known as isothiocyanates in their bodies had a 36% lower
chance of developing lung cancer over 10 years.
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Researchers from the National Institute of Environmental Health
Sciences (NIEHS) in North Carolina along with colleagues in
China performed the study in four small communities in Shanghai.
Isothiocyanates are found in broccoli and other so called "cruciferous"
vegetables.
The study is the first to link levels of isothiocyanates with a
decrease in cancer risk, as previous studies had relied on dietary
questionnaires that give no information on absorption or blood levels.
Though the chemicals did lower cancer
risk by 36% in this study, smoking alone increases lung cancer risk
by as much as 10 times.
The researchers think that isothiocyanates fight cancer by promoting
the production of antioxidants and by inhibiting enzymes that allow
carcinogens in cigarette smoke to damage DNA.
Isothiocyanates are not commercially available in pill form, and
being that there are more than 20 different isothiocyanates, it
is doubtful that a supplement would be able to duplicate the proper
mix of these chemicals to get the same benefit.
According to one of the researchers, it is more prudent to "just
eat the vegetables", rather than looking for benefits from
supplements.
The Lancet August 26th 2000;356:724-729
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