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Garlic May Repel Prostate
Cancer
Source: news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/2415035.stm
Garlic is known for
its pungent odor
Garlic
and onions could help prevent men developing prostate cancer, researchers have
said.
Men who ate the most vegetables had a 50% lower risk of having prostate cancer than those who ate the least, it was found. The benefits could be due to allium, a sulphur-based compound, which is responsible for the characteristic smell. Diet benefits Men's diets were examined by researchers from the US National Cancer Institute. Two hundred and thirty-eight men with prostate cancer and 471 men without were asked about what they ate.
The
researchers, led by Ann Hsing, said their findings provided additional
evidence that a good diet could reduce the risk of cancer.
They
said in a statement: "Several case-control studies, in which the diets of
cancer patients are compared to the diets of healthy individuals, have linked
allium vegetables to lower risk for cancer of the stomach, colon, esophagus,
breast and lining of the uterus."
Jamie
Bearse of the US Prostate Cancer Coalition, said: "It's great to see that
more favorable foods are proving to be preventatives for prostate cancer.
"Maybe
it will encourage men to put down that Big Mac and pick up a salad with chives
and onions."
Questions
Dr
Chris Hiley of the UK's Prostate Cancer Charity said men should not be eating
a lot of onions on the basis of this study.
"They
found out that some men in Shanghai who ate more onions had less prostate
cancer.
"We
can't draw cause and effect conclusions from this, because of the way the
study was conducted.
"It's
an interesting study, which generates more questions, rather than giving any
answers of use to the man in the street today."
The
research is published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
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