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- <html>
- <head><title>Vegetables, etc."Who Defines Food?</title></head>
- <body>
- <h1>
- Vegetables, etc."Who Defines Food?
- </h1>
-
- <em><p>
- Since bacteria in the rumens of cows destroy unsaturated fatty acids, but don't harm vitamin E, it seems
- reasonable to suppose that beef and milk would have a better ratio of vitamin E to unsaturated fats than
- do the plants eaten by the cows.
- </p>
- <p>
- Toxic pesticides are found in higher concentrations in the urine and fat of slaughtered animals than in
- their livers, since the livers are detoxifying the chemicals and causing them to be excreted.
- Presumably, the animals' livers will perform the same detoxification reactions with the <strong
- >phytotoxicants that occur naturally in their diet.</strong>
- </p></em>
-
- <hr />
-
- <p>
- Not long ago, breast feeding was socially unacceptable in the United States, and several manufacturers were
- teaching the world"s poorest women to use their baby-food formulas even when there was no clean water for
- its preparation. Industrialists have campaigned to convince the public that their by-products, from
- cotton-seed oil to shrimp shells, are "health foods." In several parts of the world, desperately poor people
- sometimes eat clay, and even clay has been promoted as a health food. Almost anything becomes "food," when
- people are under economic and social pressure. If these things aren"t acutely toxic, they can become part of
- our "normal" diet.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Our instincts give us a few clues about our nutritional needs, such as thirst, the hunger for salt, the
- pleasantness of sweet things, and the unpleasantness of certain odors or very acrid or bitter tastes. People
- who are constitutionally unable to taste certain bitter chemicals find certain vegetables less
- objectionable; their instinctive guidance has become less clear. But within the boundaries of cravings and
- disgust, habits and customs become the dominant forces in diet. "Professional dietitians" and other
- "experts" primarily function as enforcers of cultural prejudice.
- </p>
- <p>
- The manufacturers of pureed vegetables for babies used to put large amounts of salt, sugar, and monosodium
- glutamate into their products, because the added chemicals served as instinctual signals that made the
- material somewhat acceptable to the babies. There was no scientific basis for providing these vegetables to
- babies in a form that they would accept, but it was a profitable practice that was compatible with the
- social pressure against prolonged breast feeding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Poor people, especially in the spring when other foods were scarce, have sometimes subsisted on foliage such
- as collard and poke greens, usually made more palatable by cooking them with flavorings, such as a little
- bacon grease and lots of salt. Eventually, "famine foods" can be accepted as dietary staples. The fact that
- cows, sheep, goats and deer can thrive on a diet of foliage shows that leaves contain essential nutrients.
- Their minerals, vitamins, and amino acids are suitable for sustaining most animal life, if a sufficient
- quantity is eaten. But when people try to live primarily on foliage, as in famines, they soon suffer from a
- great variety of diseases. Various leaves contain antimetabolic substances that prevent the assimilation of
- the nutrients, and only very specifically adapted digestive systems (or technologies) can overcome those
- toxic effects.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Some plants have specific "pests," such as insects, that have adapted to be resistant to that plant"s
- toxins, but if the plant and its predator are to survive, there has to be a balance between the plant
- tissue"s digestibility and its toxicity. Injury of a plant stimulates it to make increased amounts of its
- defensive chemicals. Plant toxins are known to be specific for animal tissues; for example, a toxin will
- inhibit the action of an enzyme from an animal, but a plant enzyme that catalyzes the same reaction won"t be
- affected.
- </p>
- <p>
- Plant defensive chemicals can have beneficial uses as drugs. Plants are important sources for chemicals used
- in chemotherapy of cancer, with the purpose of stopping cell division. Other plant drugs can stimulate cell
- division. The drug from one plant will sometimes protect cells against the toxic effects of another plant.
- The use of any drug that isn"t a natural part of animal physiology will have many biological effects, so
- that a beneficial drug action will usually be accompanied by unwanted side-effects. An antioxidant may turn
- out to disrupt the endocrine system, an antiinflammatory drug may be mutagenic or carcinogenic.
- </p>
- <p>
- A particular plant will have a variety of defensive chemicals, with specific functions. Underground, the
- plant"s roots and tubers are susceptible to attack by fungi and nematodes. The leaves, stems, and seeds are
- susceptible to attack by insects, birds, and grazing animals. Since the plant"s seeds are of unique
- importance to the plant, and contain a high concentration of nutrients, they must have special protection.
- Sometimes this consists of a hard shell, and sometimes of chemicals that inhibit the animal"s digestive
- enzymes. Many plants have evolved fruits that provide concentrated food for animals, and that serve to
- distribute the seeds widely, as when a bird eats a berry, and excretes the undigested seed at a great
- distance. If the fruit were poisonous, it wouldn"t serve the plant"s purpose so well. In general, the
- plant"s most intense toxins are in its seeds, and the fruits, when mature, generally contain practically no
- toxins. Roots contain chemicals that inhibit microorganisms, but because they aren"t easily accessible by
- grazing animals and insects, they don"t contain the digestive inhibitors that are more concentrated in the
- above-ground organs of the plant.
- </p>
- <p>
- The toxins of plants include phenols, tannins, lectins/agglutinins, and trypsin-inhibitors, besides
- innumerable more specific metabolic inhibitors, including "anti-vitamins." Unsaturated fats themselves are
- important defenses, since they inhibit trypsin and other proteolytic enzymes, preventing the assimilation of
- the proteins that are present in seeds and leaves, and disrupting all biological processes that depend on
- protein breakdown, such as the formation of thyroid hormone and the removal of blood clots.
- </p>
- <p>
- Generally, fruits, roots, and tubers provide a high concentration of nutrients along with low concentrations
- of toxic antimetabolic substances.
- </p>
- <p>
- While nutritional reference tables often show fruits and potatoes as having about 2% protein content, while
- nuts, grains, and legumes are shown with a high protein content, often in the range of 15% to 40%, they
- neglect to point out that fruits and potatoes have a very high water content, while that of the seeds is
- extremely low. The protein content of milk is about 3%, which according to the charts would suggest that it
- is inferior to beans and grains. In fact, the protein value of grain is negligible, mainly because seeds
- contain their protein in a storage form, that is extremely rich in nitrogen, but poor in essential amino
- acids. Special preparation is needed to reduce the toxicity of seeds, and in the case of beans, these
- methods are never very satisfactory.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Besides their specific defensive toxins and antimetabolites, plants are major sources of allergens. The
- allergenicity of a food depends on the sensitivity of the individual, as well as on the growth conditions of
- the plant. The use of extremely toxic pesticides has affected both the crops and the sensitivity of the
- human population to allergens. Sensitivities induced originally by toxic pesticides used on certain crops
- can probably persist after the industrial chemical has been eliminated, because the immune system is
- susceptible to "conditioning."
- </p>
- <p>
- Many types of phytochemicals are mutagenic, and some of those are carcinogenic. Bruce Ames, at the
- University of California, devised a method of screening for mutagens, using bacteria. One of his graduate
- students using the technique found that the flame retardants in children's pajamas and bedding were powerful
- mutagens, and were probably causing cancer. That event made Ames a celebrity, and in the 1980s he went on a
- lecture tour supported by the American Cancer Society. His lectures reflected the doctrine of the A.C.S.,
- that industrial chemicals aren't responsible for cancer, but that individual actions, such as smoking or
- dietary choices, are the main causes of cancer. He used a fraudulently "age adjusted" graph of cancer
- mortality, that falsely showed that mortality from all types of cancer except lung cancer had leveled off
- after the A.C.S. came into existence. He described tests in which he had compared DDT to extracts of food
- herbs, and found DDT to be less mutagenic than several of the most commonly used flavoring herbs. His
- message, which was eagerly received by his audience of chemistry and biology professors, was that we should
- not worry about environmental pollution, because it's not as harmful as the things that we do to ourselves.
- He said that if everyone would eat more unsaturated vegetable oil, and didn't smoke, they wouldn't have
- anything to worry about.
- </p>
- <p>
- For me, the significance of his experiment was that plants contain natural pesticides that should be taken
- more seriously, without taking industrial toxins less seriously.
- </p>
- <p>
- Technologies have been invented to convert vegetation into digestible protein, but at our present scientific
- and technological level, it"s better to simply minimize our use of the more toxic foods, and to direct more
- effort toward the elimination of the conditions that produce famine.
- </p>
- <p>
- Animal proteins, and fruits, because they contain the lowest levels of toxins, should form the basis of the
- diet. Not all fruits, of course, are perfectly safe--avocados, for example, contain so much unsaturated fat
- that they can be carcinogenic and hepatotoxic.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Protein deficiency itself contributes to the harm done by toxins, since the liver"s ability to detoxify them
- depends on adequate nutrition, especially good protein. In the 1940s, Biskind"s experiments showed that
- protein deficiency leads to the accumulation of estrogen, because the liver normally inactivates all the
- estrogen in the blood as it passes through the liver. This applies to phytoestrogens and industrial
- estrogens as well as to the natural estrogens of the body. At a certain point, the increased estrogen and
- decreased thyroid and progesterone cause infertility, but before that point is reached, the hyperestrogenism
- causes a great variety of birth defects. Deformities of the male genitals, and later, testicular cancer in
- the sons and breast cancer in the daughters, are produced by the combination of toxins and nutritional
- deficiencies.
- </p>
- <p><h3>REFERENCES</h3></p>
- <p>
- Onderstepoort J Vet Res 1989 Jun;56(2):145-6. <strong>Thiaminase activities and thiamine content of
- Pteridium aquilinum, Equisetum ramosissimum, Malva parviflora, Pennisetum clandestinum and Medicago
- sativa.</strong> Meyer P Animal and Dairy Science Research Institute, Private Bag, Irene. Thiaminase
- type 1 and 2 activities and thiamine content of five plants were determined. Of these Pteridium aquilinum
- and Equisetum ramosissimum were found to have considerably more thiaminase activity and lower thiamine
- content than Malva parviflora, Pennisetum clandestinum and Medicago sativa.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nature 1994 Apr 21;368(6473):683-4.<strong> Mystery of the poisoned expedition.</strong>
-
- Earl JW, McCleary BV Department of Biochemistry, Royal Alexandra Hospital for Children, Camperdown, Sydney,
- New South Wales, Australia. The Burke and Wills expedition through the interior of Australia in the
- nineteenth century ended in calamity. But the cause of death was more pernicious than anyone at the time had
- imagined: beriberi due to thiaminase poisoning.
- </p>
- <p>
- Comment in: Nature 1994 Aug 11; 370(6489):408. Aust Vet J 1992 Jul;69(7):165-7. <strong>
- Mechanisms underlying Phalaris aquatica "sudden death" syndrome in sheep.</strong> Bourke CA, Carrigan
- MJ New South Wales Agriculture, Agricultural Research and Veterinary Centre, Orange. Twenty outbreaks of
- Phalaris aquatica "sudden death" syndrome in sheep were investigated between 1981 and 1991. Four were
- confirmed and one was suspected, to be a cardiac disorder; 5 were confirmed and 3 were suspected, to be a
- polioencephalomalacic disorder; the aetiology of the remaining 7 outbreaks could not be determined.
- Potentially toxic levels of hydrocyanic acid (20 to 36 mg/100 g) were measured in the 3 toxic phalaris
- pastures tested. The measurement of potentially toxic levels of nitrate nitrogen (2920 micrograms/g) in
- toxic phalaris pastures by others, was noted. It is suggested that phalaris "sudden death" syndrome could
- have as many as 4 different underlying mechanisms, and<strong>
- that these might reflect the presence in the plant of a cardio-respiratory toxin, a thiaminase and amine
- co-substate, cyanogenic compounds, and nitrate compounds.</strong>
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Indian J Med Res 1991 Oct;94:378-83. <strong>Genotoxic effects of some foods & food components in Swiss
- mice.</strong> Balachandran B, Sivaswamy SN, Sivaramakrishnan VM Isotope Division, Cancer Institute,
- Madras. A number of commonly consumed foods and food components in south India were<strong>
- screened for their genotoxic effects on Swiss mice. Salted, sundried and oil fried vegetables and fishes
- induced chromosomal aberrations, sperm head abnormalities and micronuclei production, which were
- comparable to the effect of the positive control viz., 20-methylcholanthrene. Spices like Cissus</strong
- > quadrangularis (an indigenous herb used in certain south Indian dishes) and pyrolysed cumin and aniseeds
- showed moderate effects. Calamus oil, widely used in pharmaceuticals was highly effective. All the three
- parameters of genotoxicity gave similar results.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Vivo 1998 Nov-Dec;12(6):675-89. <strong>Comparative anticancer effects of vaccination and dietary factors
- on experimentally-induced cancers.</strong>
- Zusman I Laboratory of Teratology and Experimental Oncology, Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, Faculty of
- Agriculture, Food and Environmental Quality Sciences, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel. The
- role of two major factors were analyzed in the prevention of experimentally-induced cancers: a) vaccination
- of animals with polyclonal IgG generated against the soluble p53 antigen and b) feeding of animals with
- diets rich with dietary fibers or fat. a) In vaccination, a few attempts have been made to utilize p53
- protein as a tumor suppressor. IgG generated against the cytoplasmic, soluble p53 antigen from tumor-bearing
- rats prevents the carcinogenic effect of 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) decreasing significantly the number of
- tumor-bearing rats in vaccinated group compared with non vaccinated controls and preventing benign tumors
- from becoming malignant. The antitumor effect of vaccination is accompanied by a significant increase in the
- serum-level of p53 antigen in vaccinated rats compared with non vaccinated controls. The immune response of
- a host to vaccination activates the lymph components of the spleen, and this activation is manifested by the
- multiplication of the number of lymphocytes which are generated against specific antigens. This
- multiplication is achieved by the higher division of the antigen-specific lymphoblasts with their subsequent
- transformation into plasma cells. These cells synthesize the specific protein (IgG). One such protein is the
- tumor-associated p53 protein, which is synthesized by rats against rabbit anti-p53 IgG. b) The role of
- dietary factors in the prevention of chemically induced cancer was reviewed on two models: the role of high
- fiber diets in prevention of colon cancer, and <strong>the role of high fat diets in the prevention of
- mammary gland cancer.</strong> Experiments in colon cancer showed that 20% cellulose decreased
- significantly tumor incidence caused by DMH. The tumor-preventive effect of a cellulose diet was accompanied
- by increased enzyme concentrations, such as ornithine decarboxylase, thymidine kinase and
- beta-glucuronidase. This effect was accompanied by activation of some cellular mechanisms, i.e. apoptosis,
- proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) and p53 protein synthesis. <strong>Experiments in mammary glands
- cancer showed that a 15% olive-oil diet reduced significantly the tumor incidence caused by
- 9,10-dimethyl-1,2-benzanthracene. The antitumor effect of the olive-oil diet was connected to its
- content of monounsaturated fatty acids, such as oleic and palmitic acids. The promotive tumorigenic
- effects of other high-fat diets (avocado, soybeans) were associated with high content of some
- polyunsaturated fatty acids (linoleic and alpha-linolenic).</strong> Different diets have different
- targets. The effect of the same diet depends on its anti-tumor substances content. CONCLUSIONS: Vaccination
- and some diets have similar mechanism in their tumor-preventive effects.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Ann Nutr Metab 1991;35(5):253-60.<strong>
- Effect of dietary avocado oils on hepatic collagen metabolism</strong>. Wermam MJ, Mokady S, Neeman I
- Department of Food Engineering and Biotechnology, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa. The
- effect of various avocado and soybean oils on collagen metabolism in the liver was studied in growing female
- rats for 8 weeks and in day-old chicks for 1 week. In comparison with rats fed either refined avocado oil,
- refined or unrefined soybean oils, rats fed <strong>unrefined avocado oil showed a significant decrease in
- total collagen solubility
- </strong>
- in the liver, while there were no changes in total collagen, protein and moisture content. Chicks fed
- unrefined avocado oil as compared to those fed refined avocado oil also showed a decrease in hepatic total
- soluble collagen while hepatic total collagen remained unaffected. Electron micrographs and light-microscope
- examinations of rats' liver revealed<strong>
- collagen accumulation in the periportal location. This is suggestive of the early stages of
- fibrosis.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- Life Sci 1997;60(19):1635-41. <strong>L-canaline: a potent antimetabolite and anti-cancer agent from
- leguminous plants.</strong> Rosenthal GA Laboratory of Biochemical Ecology, University of Kentucky,
- Lexington 40506, USA. <a href="mailto:garose@ukcc.uky.edu" target="_blank">garose@ukcc.uky.edu</a>
- L-Canaline, the L-2-amino-4-(aminooxy)butyric acid structural analog of L-ornithine' is a powerful
- antimetabolite stored in many leguminous plants. This nonprotein amino acid <strong>reacts vigorously with
- the pyridoxal phosphate moiety of vitamin B6-containing enzymes to form a covalently-bound oxime that
- inactivates, often irreversibly, the enzyme.
- </strong>
-
- Canaline is not only capable of inhibiting ornithine-dependent enzymic activity, but it also can function as
- a lysine antagonist. Recently, this natural product was found to possess significant antineoplastic in vitro
- activity against human pancreatic cancer cells.
- </p>
- <p>
- Food Chem Toxicol 1999 May;37(5):481-91. <strong>Occurrence of emodin, chrysophanol and physcion in
- vegetables, herbs and liquors. Genotoxicity and anti-genotoxicity of the anthraquinones and of the whole
- plants.</strong> Mueller SO, Schmitt M, Dekant W, Stopper H, Schlatter J, Schreier P, Lutz WK Department
- of Toxicology, University of Wurzburg, Germany.<strong>
- 1,8-Dihydroxyanthraquinones, present in laxatives, fungi imperfecti, Chinese herbs and possibly
- vegetables, are in debate as human carcinogens. We screened a variety of vegetables (cabbage lettuce,
- beans, peas), some herbs and herbal-flavoured liquors for their content of the 'free' anthraquinones
- emodin, chrysophanol and physcion. For qualitative and quantitative analysis, reversed-phase HPLC
- (RP-LC), gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and RP-LC-MS were used. The vegetables showed a
- large batch-to-batch variability, from 0.04 to 3.6, 5.9 and 36 mg total anthraquinone per kg fresh
- weight in peas, cabbage lettuce, and beans,</strong>
- respectively. Physcion predominated in all vegetables. <strong>In the herbs grape vine leaves, couch grass
- root and plantain herb, anthraquinones were above the limit of detection. Contents ranged below 1
- mg/kg</strong> (dry weight). All three anthraquinones were also found in seven of 11 herbal-flavoured
- liquors, in a range of 0.05 mg/kg to 7.6 mg/kg. The genotoxicity of the analysed anthraquinones was
- investigated in the comet assay, the micronucleus test and the mutation assay in mouse lymphoma L5178Y
- tk+/-<strong>
- cells. Emodin was genotoxic, whereas chrysophanol and physcion showed no effects. Complete vegetable
- extract on its own did not show any effect in the micronucleus test. A lettuce extract completely
- abolished the induction of micronuclei by the genotoxic anthraquinone danthron. Taking into
- consideration</strong> the measured concentrations of anthraquinones, estimated daily intakes, the
- genotoxic potency, as well as protective effects of the food matrix, the analysed constituents do not
- represent a high priority genotoxic risk in a balanced human diet.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Int J Food Sci Nutr 1998 Sep;49(5):343-52. <strong>Lipid content and fatty acid composition in foods
- commonly consumed by nursing Congolese women: incidences on their essential fatty acid intakes and
- breast milk fatty acids.</strong>
- Rocquelin G, Tapsoba S, Mbemba F, Gallon G, Picq C Tropical Nutrition Unit, ORSTOM, Montpellier, France. The
- fat content and fatty acid (FA) composition of nearly 40 foods, currently consumed by 102 nursing Congolese
- mothers living in Brazzaville, were determined to assess their impact on mothers' essential fatty acid (EFA)
- intakes and breast milk FA. Data on mothers' milk FA and dietary habits which allowed food selection were
- recently published (Rocquelin et al., 1998). Most foods were locally produced. Food samples were collected
- at local markets, bleached if necessary to avoid microbial degradation, and stored at +4 degrees C or -20
- degrees C. They were lyophilized upon their arrival in the laboratory before lipid analyses. FA composition
- of food lipids was determined by capillary gas chromatography. Staple diets included low-fat,
- high-carbohydrate foods (processed cassava roots, wheat bread) and high-polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA)
- foods: soybean oil (high in 18 : 2 n-6 and alpha-18 : 3 n-3), bushbutter<strong>
- (dacryodes edulis), peanuts, avocado (high in fat and 18 : 2 n-6), freshwater</strong>
- and salt-water fish (high in LC n-3 and/or n-6 PUFA), and leafy green vegetables<strong>
- (low in fat but very high in alpha-18 : 3 n-3). Their frequent consumption by</strong> nursing mothers
- provided enough EFA to meet requirements due to lactation. It<strong>
- also explains why mothers' breast milk was rich in C8-C14 saturated FA (26% of</strong> total FA) and in
- n-6, n-3 PUFA (respectively 15.0% and 2.4% of total FA) highly profitable for breastfed infants'
- development. From this point of view, dietary habits of Congolese mothers have to be sustained for they are
- more adequate than most Western-type diets.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Med Oncol Tumor Pharmacother 1990;7(2-3):69-85.<strong>
- Dietary carcinogens, environmental pollution, and cancer: some misconceptions.</strong> Ames BN, Gold LS
- Division of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of California, Berkeley 94720. Various
- misconceptions about dietary carcinogens, pesticide residues, and cancer<strong>
- causation are discussed. The pesticides in our diet are 99.99% natural, since plants make an enormous
- variety of toxins against fungi, insects, and animal predators. Although only 50 of these natural
- pesticides have been tested in</strong> animal cancer tests, about half of them are carcinogens. About
- half of all chemicals tested in animal cancer tests are positive. The proportion of natural pesticides
- positive in animal tests of clastogenicity is also the same as for synthetic chemicals. It is argued that
- testing chemicals in animals at the maximum tolerated dose primarily measures chronic cell proliferation, a
- threshold process. Cell proliferation is mutagenic in several ways, including inducing mitotic
- recombination, and therefore chronic induction of cell proliferation is a risk factor for cancer.
- </p>
- <p>
- Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 1980 Aug;77(8):4961-5. <strong>Fecalase: a model for activation of dietary
- glycosides to mutagens by intestinal flora.</strong> Tamura G, Gold C, Ferro-Luzzi A, Ames BN Many
- substances in the plant kingdom and in man's diet occur as glycosides. Recent studies have indicated that
- many glycosides that are not mutagenic in tests such as the Salmonella test become mutagenic upon hydrolysis
- of the glycosidic linkages. The Salmonella test utilizes a liver homogenate to approximate mammalian
- metabolism but does not provide a source of the enzymes present in intestinal bacterial flora that hydrolyze
- the wide variety of glycosides present in nature. We describe a stable cell-free extract of human feces,
- fecalase, which is shown to contain various glycosidases that allow the in vitro activation of many natural
- glycosides to mutagens in the Salmonella/liver homogenate test. Many beverages, such as red wine (but
- apparently not white wine) and tea, contain glycosides of the mutagne quercetin. Red wine, red grape juice,
- and tea were mutagenic in the test when fecalase was added, and red wine contained considerable direct
- mutagenic activity in the absence of fecalase. The implications of quercetin mutagenicity and
- carcinogenicity are discussed.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- Br J Rheumatol 1994 Aug;33(8):790-1. <strong>Even garlic.</strong> Sweetman BJ
- </p>
- <p>
- Nutr Cancer 1988;11(4):251-7. <strong>Cytotoxicity of extracts of spices to cultured cells.</strong>
- Unnikrishnan MC, Kuttan R Amala Cancer Research Centre, Kerala, India. The cytotoxicity of the extracts from
- eight different spices used in the Indian diet was determined using Dalton's lymphoma ascites tumor cells
- and human lymphocytes in vitro and Chinese Hamster Ovary cells and Vero cells in tissue culture. Alcoholic
- extracts of the spices were found to be more cytotoxic to these cells than their aqueous extracts. Alcoholic
- extracts of several spices inhibited cell growth at concentrations of 0.2-1 mg/ml in vitro and 0.12-0.3
- mg/ml in tissue culture.<strong>
- Ginger, pippali (native to India; also called dried catkins), pepper, and garlic showed the highest
- activity followed by asafetida, mustard, and horse-gram (native to India). These extracts also inhibited
- the thymidine uptake into DNA.</strong>
- </p>
- <p>
- J Toxicol Sci 1984 Feb;9(1):77-86.<strong>
- [Mutagenicity and cytotoxicity tests of garlic]. [</strong>Article in Japanese] Yoshida S, Hirao Y,
- Nakagawa S Mutagenicity and cytotoxicity of fresh juice and alcohol extract from garlic were studied by
- Ames' test, Rec assay, Micronucleus test and the check of the influence to HEp 2 and chinese hamster embryo
- (CHE) primary cultured cells. No evidence of mutagenicity of these samples were observed in Ames' test and
- Rec assay, while there was dose dependent increase of micronucleated cells and polychromatocytes on the bone
- marrow cells of mice and chinese hamsters treated with garlic juice. There were severe damages, e.g. growth
- inhibition and morphological changes of both cultured cells due to garlic juice, but no or slightly
- cytotoxic signs were observed even in high concentration of garlic extract. A higher sensitivity to the
- cytotoxic effects of garlic was seen by the present findings with CHE primary cells than HEp 2 cell line.
- </p>
- <p>
- Chung Hua Chung Liu Tsa Chih 1985 Mar;7(2):103-5 <strong>[Comparison of the cytotoxic effect of fresh
- garlic, diallyl trisulfide, 5-fluorouracil (5-FU), mitomycin C (MMC) and Cis-DDP on two lines of gastric
- cancer cells].</strong>
- [Article in Chinese] Pan XY Teratog Carcinog Mutagen 1998; 18(6):293-302 <strong>
- In vitro and in vivo study of the clastogenicity of the flavone cirsitakaoside extracted from Scoparia
- dulcis L. (Scrophulariaceae).</strong> Pereira-Martins SR, Takahashi CS, Tavares DC, Torres LM
- Department of Biology, Federal University of Maranhao, Sao Luis, MA. Brazil. <a
- href="mailto:smartins@rgm.fmrp.usp.br"
- target="_blank"
- >smartins@rgm.fmrp.usp.br</a> The mutagenic effect of the flavone cirsitakaoside extracted from the
- medicinal herb Scoparia dulcis was evaluated in vitro by using human peripheral blood cultures treated with
- doses of 5, 10, and 15 microg of the flavone/ml culture medium for 48 h. The compound proved to be mutagenic
- at the highest concentration tested (15 microg/ml). Furthermore, the proliferative index was significantly
- reduced in all cultures treated with the flavone, although the mitotic index was not reduced. However, the
- clastogenic activity of the flavone cirsitakaoside was not observed when Swiss mice were treated orally with
- doses of 10, 20, and 30 mg/animal for 24 h.
- </p>
- <p>
- Proc Nutr Soc 1977 Sep;36(2):51A.<strong>Attempts to overcome anti-nutritive factors in field beans (Vicia
- faba L) and field peas (Pisum sativum) fed in diets to laying hens.
- </strong>
-
- Davidson J
- </p>
- <p>
- Am J Clin Nutr 1995 Sep;62(3):506-11. <strong>The influence of genetic taste markers on food
- acceptance.</strong> Drewnowski A, Rock CL Human Nutrition Program, School of Public Health, University
- of Michigan, Ann Arbor 48109-2029, USA. Genetically mediated sensitivity to the bitter taste of
- phenylthiocarbamide<strong>
- (PTC) and 6-n-propylthiouracil (Prop) has long been associated with enhanced sensitivity to other sweet
- and bitter compounds. New studies suggest that tasters and supertasters of Prop may also differ from
- notasters in their taste preferences and in their patterns of food rejection and food acceptance. One
- question is whether the acceptability of bitter-tasting vegetables is influenced by Prop taster status.
- Cruciferous vegetables are among the major dietary</strong> sources of potentially chemoprotective
- agents in cancer control, and their consumption is reported to alter cancer risk. Strategies aimed at
- dietary change in individuals or groups should consider the role of genetic taste markers and their
- potential influences on food preferences and dietary habits.
- </p>
- <p>
- J Environ Sci Health B 1999 Jul;34(4):681-708. <strong>Accumulation of potentially toxic elements in plants
- and their transfer to human food chain.</strong>
- Dudka S, Miller WP University of Georgia, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Athens 30602-2727, USA.
- Contaminated soils can be a source for crop plants of such elements like As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, and Zn. The
- excessive transfer of As, Cu, Ni, and Zn to the food chain is controlled by a "soil-plant barrier"; <strong
- >however, for some elements, including Cd, the soil-plant barrier fails.</strong> The level of Cd ingested
- by average person in USA is about 12 micrograms/day, which is relatively low comparing to Risk Reference
- Dose (70 micrograms Cd/day) established by USEPA. <strong>Food of plant origin is a main source of Cd intake
- by modern society.</strong> Fish and shellfish may be a dominant dietary sources of Hg for some human
- populations. <strong>About half of human Pb intake is through food, of which more than half originates from
- plants.</strong>
-
- Dietary intake of Cd and Pb may be increased by application of sludges on cropland with already high levels
- of these metals. Soils amended with sludges in the USA <strong>will be permitted (by USEPA-503 regulations)
- to accumulate Cr, Cd, Cu, Pb, Hg, Ni, and Se, and Zn to levels from 10 to 100 times the present baseline
- concentrations.</strong>
- These levels are very permissive by international standards. Because of the limited supply of toxicity data
- obtained from metals applied in sewage sludge, predictions as to the new regulations will protect crop
- plants from metal toxicities, and food chain from contamination, are difficult to make.
- </p>
- <p>
- BJU Int 2000 Jan;85(1):107-13. <strong>A maternal vegetarian diet in pregnancy is associated with
- hypospadias. The ALSPAC Study Team. Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood.</strong>
- North K, Golding J Unit of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, Division of Child Health, University of
- Bristol, UK. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the possible role of the maternal diet, particularly vegetarianism
- and consumption of phytoestrogens, in the origin of hypospadias, which is reported to be increasing in
- prevalence. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Detailed information was obtained prospectively from mothers, including
- previous obstetric history, lifestyle and dietary practices, using structured self-completed questionnaires
- during pregnancy. Previously recognized associations with environmental and parental factors were examined,
- focusing particularly on the hypothesized hormonal link. Multivariate logistic regression was used to
- identify independent associations. RESULTS: Of 7928 boys born to mothers taking part in the Avon
- Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood, 51 hypospadias cases were identified. There were no
- significant differences in the proportion of hypospadias cases among mothers who smoked, consumed alcohol or
- for any aspect of their previous reproductive history (including the number of previous pregnancies, number
- of miscarriages, use of the contraceptive pill, time to conception and age at menarche). <strong>Significant
- differences were detected for some aspects of the maternal diet, i.e. vegetarianism and iron
- supplementation in the first half of pregnancy. Mothers who were vegetarian in pregnancy had an adjusted
- odds ratio (OR) of 4.99 (95% confidence interval, CI, 2.10-11.88) of giving birth to a boy with
- hypospadias, compared with omnivores who did not supplement their diet with iron. Omnivores who
- supplemented their diet with iron had an adjusted OR of 2.07 (</strong>95% CI, 1.00-4.32). The only
- other statistically significant association for hypospadias was with influenza in the first 3 months of
- pregnancy (adjusted OR 3.19, 95% CI 1.50-6.78). CONCLUSION: As vegetarians have a greater exposure to
- phytoestrogens than do omnivores, these results support the possibility that phytoestrogens have a
- deleterious effect on the developing male reproductive system.
- </p>
-
- <p>
- © Ray Peat 2006. All Rights Reserved. www.RayPeat.com
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