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UW
Study Shows Pomegranate Juice May Help Fight Lung Cancer
04/04/07
Researchers are adding to
the list of cancer types for which pomegranates seem to halt
growth. A recent study at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
using a mouse model shows that consuming pomegranates could
potentially help reduce the growth and spread of lung cancer
cells or even prevent lung cancer from developing.
In the April 1 issue of Cancer
Research, researchers led by Hasan Mukhtar, co-leader of the
Cancer Chemoprevention Program of the University of Wisconsin
Paul P. Carbone Comprehensive Cancer Center, demonstrate that
drinking pomegranate fruit extract helps slow the growth of lung
cancer in mice.
"Pomegranate fruit
continues to show great promise," says Mukhtar, professor of
dermatology at the School of Medicine and Public Health and a
member of the Carbone Cancer Center. "We have earlier shown
that pomegranate fruit contains very powerful skin and prostate
cancer-fighting agents. These recent findings expand the possible
health benefits of the fruit to the leading cause of cancer death
in the country and worldwide: lung cancer."
In the study, the research team
examined the effect of oral consumption of a dose
of pomegranate fruit extract on
the growth, progression, blood-vessel development and signaling
pathways in two mouse lung tumor protocols. The dosages tested
were comparable to what humans could reasonably consume in a day.
Chemicals were used to induce lung tumors, and the mice received
pomegranate extract in drinking water. Lung tumor yield was then
examined at different times during several months. Mice who were
exposed to cancer-inducing chemicals and who were treated with
pomegranate had significantly lower lung tumor growth than mice
treated with carcinogens only. Tumor reduction was 53.9 percent
at 84 days and 61.6 percent at 140 days.
The key to the cancer-fighting
capabilities of pomegranate lies in its abundance of antioxidants
that have an anti-inflammatory effect. In fact, researchers say
pomegranate juice has higher levels of antioxidants than do red
wine and green tea, which have also been investigated for their
potential cancer prevention effects.
The pomegranate (Punica
granatum L.) fruit has been used for centuries in ancient
cultures for medicinal purposes. For a long time, the fruit has
been widely consumed fresh and, more recently, in beverage form
as juice. In other studies, the fruit has been shown to suppress
inflammatory cell signaling proteins in colon and prostate
cancer. The fruit also possesses other remarkable
anti-tumor-promoting effects.
Lung cancer has increased at
alarming rates in the last decade, particularly because of trends
in smoking. Lung cancer is now the most common cause of cancer
death in the world, representing 28 percent of all cancer deaths.
Physicians have found this cancer difficult to control with
conventional therapeutic and surgical approaches, and the
prognosis is poor with an overall five-year survival rate of
10-14 percent in the United States.
Researchers believe delaying
the process of lung cancer development could be an important
strategy to control this disease. Mukhtar says that the use of
fruits and vegetables endowed with cancer-fighting properties is
the best way to achieve this goal.
Source:
University of Wisconsin, Madison

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