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bvtaylor
Wed, Feb-09-05, 09:01
Crunch! Carrots May Cut Cancer Risk (http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=97&u=/hsn/20050209/hl_hsn/crunchcarrotsmaycutcancerrisk&printer=1)



1 hour, 53 minutes ago



By Steven Reinberg

HealthDay Reporter



WEDNESDAY, Feb. 9 (HealthDayNews) -- There's more good news from the garden: A compound in carrots may be a potent cancer fighter, reducing malignancies in rats by a third, a European study claims.



"One of the natural pesticides in carrots is responsible for the cancer-preventing effect of carrots," said lead researcher Kirsten Brandt, a senior lecturer at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne, in England. "We now have identified a compound which seems to have an effect that can explain this benefit."



Nutrition experts have long recommended that people eat carrots because of their apparent ability to prevent cancer, but, until now, the particular compound driving this effect was not known. Epidemiological studies have shown that individuals with the highest carrot consumption can lower their risk of cancer by up to 40 percent.



Now, Brandt's team says that falcarinol, a compound that protects the vegetable from fungal diseases, may be the prime reason carrots are so unfriendly to cancers. One previous study had suggested that might be the case, but results were inconclusive.



To find out if falcarinol really does prevent cancer, Brandt's team studied 24 rats with precancerous tumors that mimicked human colorectal cancer. The rats were assigned to three groups, and each group was given a different diet.



After 18 weeks, Brandt's group found that rats that ate carrots along with their ordinary feed, as well as a second group that had falcarinol added to their feed, were one-third less likely to develop cancerous tumors compared with rats that were not given either, according to the report in the February issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.



Brandt said the exact mechanism behind falcarinol's anti-cancer activity remains unknown. The researchers also don't know if the results seen in rats would be seen in humans. "But, it is encouraging that the data fits with what we have seen in humans," Brandt said.



These findings reinforce the message that people should eat five servings of fruit and vegetables everyday, she said.



"We have now tested carrots," she added. "But there are a lot of other vegetables that we have not tested, which might have the same properties. There are lots of other similar compounds in other vegetables."



However, whether the beneficial effect of falcarinol is diluted or eliminated when carrots are cooked or juiced is unknown. That needs to be tested, Brandt said.



The researchers were intrigued that the vegetable's natural pesticides may be the real cancer-fighters, not vitamins or other nutrients. According to Brandt, the discovery may answer the longstanding question, "Why is it that eating vegetables is so much better for your health than just taking a vitamin pill with the same amount of vitamins and minerals?"



In addition, the finding might be important in developing new cancer treatments, she said. However, Brandt believes the quickest benefit can be achieved by simply developing carrots that have more falcarinol. "We might be able to double the intake of falcarinol, and that might have large benefits for public health," she said.



Another expert, Vicky Stevens, a research scientist at the American Cancer Society (news - web sites), remains cautious. "It is a little difficult to know where this is going to go in relation to humans," she said "It is worthy of further research."



Stevens believes falcarinol might be just one weapon in the vegetable anti-cancer armamentarium. "We don't expect that there is going to be one single magic bullet. It is still important to consider the rest of the carrot, and other vegetables," she said.



"Perhaps the single most significant implication of this study is that it reaffirms dietary common sense in our era of dietary silliness," said Dr. David L. Katz, an associate clinical professor of public health and director of the Prevention Research Center at Yale University School of Medicine.



Katz noted that some of the popular "low-carb" diets actually banish carrots because they have a high glycemic (sugar) index. "Brandt helps reveal the folly of this oversimplified and rigid interpretation of what constitutes good food," he said.



"We may have to wait to know for sure that falcarinol can help prevent cancer in humans," Katz said. "But we needn't wait to derive likely health benefits from eating carrots often -- and I, for one, don't intend to."

bvtaylor
Wed, Feb-09-05, 09:07
Everything in moderation. Certainly when we are on Induction we follow a different focus when we choose veggies to reduce the total glycemic load, but induction is a temporary weight-loss stage, not a long term "controlled carb" lifestyle. I think that maintenance can certainly allow a modicum of carrots.

6 medium baby carrots are 4 net carbs with an awful lot of different vitanutrients. (See Fitday). I have continued to make carrots a part of my salads, even when I was in induction. It doesn't mean that I have to eat a one-pound bag of carrots, but eating this amount I think adds a bit of crunch, zest, and nutrition that is acceptable.

tripletmom
Wed, Feb-09-05, 10:54
I agree. We usually have a bag of baby carrots in the fridge for nibbling. We cook with them, put them in salads, and in the summer we grow them in the garden.

I'd much rather have the 6 medium baby carrots to spend 4 net carbs, than to eat many of the franken foods for the same expenditure.

RCFletcher
Wed, Feb-09-05, 11:05
The GI of carrots is much lower when raw than when cooked by the way.

tom sawyer
Wed, Feb-09-05, 12:02
Carrots, tomatoes, onions, are all worth the few carbs they carry. A responsible way to spend your carb allowance.

As for them finding this chemical with the anticancer properties, who cares? I suppose they will isolate the chemical and sell it so people don't have to actually eat the vegetable.

neo_crone
Wed, Feb-09-05, 14:36
The GI of carrots is much lower when raw than when cooked by the way.

In my LF LCal days I lost over 60lbs by munching on raw carrots whenever hunger struck.
Even now on LC I still keep carrots in my food plans.
No-one ever got fat by eating too many carrots, IMHO.
Or onions, or Beets, for that matter :lol:

neo_crone

Dodger
Wed, Feb-09-05, 16:00
It seems like every week there is another study showing that some vegeatable has amazing cancer finghting compounds. So how come people who eat lots of these vegetables/fruits/grains still get cancer?

RCFletcher
Thu, Feb-10-05, 02:29
Some of this research (not the carrots) was triggered after someone discovered that people in Eastern Europe get less cancer than in the rest of Europe, despite the fact that they smoke and drink more.

In the end it was put down to the fact that they eat a lot of cabbage. (And it is a lot I can tell you - I lived for eight years in Belarus and I've just come back from a month there living with a Belarusian family.

This anti cancer compound was isolated and found to be strongest in broccholi.

So it would look like a raw carrot salad followed by broccholi would be the optimum anti cancer meal?

P.S. They also eat a lot of carrots - in fact in winter, cabbage, carrots and onions are the only reasonably priced fresh vegetables available.

Nancy LC
Thu, Feb-10-05, 08:34
It seems like every week there is another study showing that some vegeatable has amazing cancer finghting compounds. So how come people who eat lots of these vegetables/fruits/grains still get cancer?

Well, it's probably a few reasons. It isn't a sure-fire preventative. Some people are going to get cancer regardless. Also, some people may be eating a little of the anti-cancer veggies, but not all that much. Might not really help in the quantities they eat. Probably most of the people coming to this forum weren't big veggie eaters until they got into their diets and interested in nutrition.

I always thought there's probably a lot of good stuff in veggies that will help with various diseases. Might as well get as much as I can of the best ones.