Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Could carrots beat prostate cancer? Vegetable and other foods rich in Vitamin A help make disease more treatable

  • Acid in Vitamin A can stop cancer spreading to surrounding tissue
  • Scientists dub the development as 'exciting'


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    carrots
    Carrots could be used in the fight against prostate cancer
    Carrots are the new weapon in the war against prostate cancer, scientists have claimed.
    A study led by Professor Norman Maitland at the University of York says a diet rich in Vitamin A could be the key to beating the disease because it makes it more treatable.
    The researchers have discovered that retenoic acid, a chemical made from Vitamin A, can reduce the ability of the cancer to invade surrounding tissue.
    Vitamin A can be found in foods such as carrots, sweet potatoes and leafy green vegetables such as kale.
    Prof Maitland said: 'If the cancer is confined to the prostate it’s much more treatable with conventional medicine. This is about prevention rather than cure but it can stop the spread of cancer.
    'We have found that specific twin genes are turned off in malignant prostate cancer stem cells. When we turn them back on using retenoic acid, the cancer becomes less aggressive.
    'It has been known for many years that low vitamin A in samples of men’s blood is associated with prostate cancer, but nobody knew the mechanisms involved.
    'This is an exciting new development which links an element from our diet to prostate cancer stem cells.'
     

    Each year 41,000 men in the UK are diagnosed with prostate cancer and more than 10,000 die of the disease.
    Young woman preparing carrots
    Carrots contain Vitamin A, which scientists believe could make the disease more treatable


    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2310143/Could-effective-battle-prostate-cancer-according-scientists.html#ixzz2Qk03CrSB 
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