Kruiden
zoals turmeric en kerrie tegen kanker.*
Uit
laboratoriumonderzoek blijkt dat curcumin, de stof die de gele kleur geeft aan
tumeric en kerrie de groei van huidkankercellen doet stoppen. Het doet dat door
een overactief molecuul NF-kappaB te neutraliseren waardoor de tumorgroei stopt.
In
eerdere studies was al gebleken dat curcumin goed is in de bestrijding van
verschillende kankers zoals huid-, borst- en pancreaskanker.
Curry
Spice Shuts Down Melanoma
In the lab, high doses of curcumin killed melanoma
tumor cells.
-- Curcumin, the ingredient that gives curry its yellow
hue, blocked the growth of melanoma tumor
cells and even stimulated their death in the laboratory, researchers report.
"We could completely inhibit the growth of the
tumor if we used a big enough dose," said study co-author Bharat B.
Aggarwal, chief of the Cytokine Research Section in the Department of
Experimental Therapeutics at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer
Center in Houston. His report is set to appear in the Aug. 15 issue of Cancer.
Aggarwal and his colleagues exposed three different cell lines of melanoma to
curcumin, which is found in turmeric, a spice used in curry dishes. Exposure to
curcumin decreased the cell viability of all three cell lines, they found. They
zeroed in on a molecule called NF-kappa B, which is known to be overactive in
several types of tumors, including melanoma. The turmeric shut down the molecule
and that lead to inhibition of the tumor growth, Aggarwal explained.
In other preliminary research, including some by
Aggarwal's team, turmeric has proven useful in treating multiple
myeloma,
as well as breast and pancreatic cancers.
The new findings were
praised by Costas Koumenis, an associate professor of radiation oncology at Wake
Forest University School of Medicine. "I think it's an interesting and
provocative study," he said. "It shows some new insight into how
turmeric is working to inhibit the growth of melanoma cells."
Koumenis is studying whether curcumin can be used to
enhance radiation
therapy in deadly brain tumors called gliomas and other tumors in
animals.
The Texas researchers
also pinpointed exactly how the spice ingredient works to kill tumor cells, he
said. "It gives us a better understanding of the mechanism of how it works
to inhibit melanoma growth."
But he cautioned that the
study was done in the lab, and the spice must be tested on animals, and
eventually people, before it is proven to be effective.
For the past 20 years, Koumenis said, turmeric has been
studied, mostly as an agent to prevent cancer. For instance, some researchers
have found an association between diets rich in curcumin and reduced rates of colon cancer. But more recently, the focus has shifted
to study the spice as a cancer treatment.
(Juli 2005)