Broccoli, radijs en andere spruitsoorten beschermen tegen kanker.*
Door dagelijks, 14 dagen lang, ruim 100 gram broccoli, radijs, alfalfa en rode klaver spruiten te eten ontstaat een duidelijke bescherming tegen DNA schade in bloedcellen. DNA schade is het begin van kanker.
Super Sprouts Could Help
Reduce Cancer Risk
A few forkfuls of sprouted
vegetables could help protect against cancer, new research by Professor Ian
Rowland and Chris Gill has shown.
Eating just over 100 grams of
tasty sprouted vegetables every day for a fortnight has been shown to have clear
protective effects against DNA damage in human blood cells, according to the
researchers.
“DNA damage is associated
with cancer risk. Sources of DNA damage include diet-related carcinogens, and
bodily processes like oxidative stress – and the raw sprouts protect against
this kind of damage.
“And just a portion – 113
grammes - per day of a mix of broccoli, radish, alfalfa and clover sprouts was
enough in our tests to show the protective effect,” said Professor Rowland.
Professor Rowland’s research
is to be published this summer in Cancer, Epidemiology, Biomarkers and
Prevention, a respected academic journal of research in the field.
The findings were presented
today at BioIreland 2004, – Stepping Stones To Success, a major all Ireland
biotechnology conference being held at the University’s of Ulster’s
Coleraine campus from June 20-22.
Scientists, politicians, enterprise agency representatives and venture capital finance experts from the US, Europe and beyond are at the University of Ulster’s Coleraine campus for the conference, showcasing the strengths and business opportunities opening up for the island’s burgeoning biotechnology sector.(juni 2004)