Waterkers
tegen kanker.*
Regelmatig waterkers eten reduceert de DNA schade aan bloedcellen aanzienlijk blijkt een kleine Engelse studie. Een groep van 60 gezonde mensen werd samengesteld zodanig dat ze een goed beeld vormen van een doorsnee iemand met een normaal voedingspatroon. Acht weken lang kregen zij, als aanvulling op hun normale voeding, iedere dag 85 gram verse waterkers. De reducties in oxidatieschade bleken vooral het grootst te zijn bij rokers, op zich niet vreemd want zij hebben doorgaand de hoogste oxidatieschade. Gemiddeld werd bij de deelnemers 22,9% minder DNA schade gezien aan de lymfocyten (witte bloedcellen). Verder werd een duidelijke verhoging gezien van de bloedwaarden aan luteïne en bètacaroteen. Deze twee bioactieve stoffen verhogen ook nog eens de antioxidatieve kracht van het lichaam.
Waterkers is een kruisbloemige groente die nu weer in de belangstelling komt te staan. Honderd jaar geleden werd het nog gegeten door veel mensen die te arm waren om ander eten te kopen.
Watercress
shows anti-cancer potential
Eating
watercress daily can significantly reduce DNA damage to blood cells, which is
considered to be an important trigger in the development of cancer, University
of Ulster scientists revealed.
The
research, published in this month's American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
found that in addition to reducing DNA damage, a daily portion of watercress
also increased the ability of those cells to resist further DNA damage caused by
free radicals.
The
dietary trial involved 30 healthy men and 30 healthy women (including 30 smokers)
eating an 85g bag (a cereal bowl full) of fresh watercress every day for eight
weeks. The beneficial changes were greatest among the smokers. This may reflect
the greater toxic burden or oxidative stress amongst the smokers, as smokers
were also found to have significantly lower antioxidant levels at the start of
the study compared to the non-smokers.
Professor
Ian Rowland, who led the research project, said: "Our findings are highly
significant. Population studies have shown links between higher intakes of
cruciferous vegetables like watercress, and a reduced risk of a number of
cancers. However, such studies don't give direct information about causal
effects. What makes this study unique is it involves people eating watercress in
easily achievable amounts, to see what impact that might have on known
bio-markers of cancer risk, such as DNA damage. Most studies to date have relied
on tests conducted in test tubes or in animals, with chemicals derived from
cruciferous vegetables."
Prof.
Rowland added: "Blood cell DNA damage is an indicator of whole body cancer
risk, and, the results support the theory that consumption of watercress is
linked to an overall reduced risk of cancer at various sites in the body. The
nature of the study group also means that the results are applicable to the
general population eating a normal diet."
The
single blind, randomised, crossover study was carried out with volunteers aged
between 19 and 55. The volunteers ate one daily portion of watercress in
addition to their normal diet.
The key
findings of the watercress diet are as follows:
significant reduction in DNA damage to lymphocytes
(white blood cells), by 22.9 per cent.
reduction in DNA damage to lymphocytes (white blood
cells) when a sample was challenged with the free radical generating chemical
hydrogen peroxide, by 9.4%
reduction in blood triglyceride levels, by an average
of 10%
significant increase in blood levels of lutein and
beta-carotene, which have antioxidant activity, by 100% and 33% respectively(higher
intakes of lutein have also been associated with a lower incidence of eye
diseases such as cataract and age-related macular degeneration).
Average
intakes of dietary fibre, vitamin C, vitamin E, folate and beta- carotene, were
significantly higher during the watercress phase of the study.
The two
year research project was funded by The Watercress Alliance, made up of British
watercress producers, Vitacress Salads, Alresford Salads and The Watercress
Company.
Member
Steve Rothwell commented: "We have known for years that the special mustard
oil in watercress, PEITC, has significant anticancer properties. But research on
PEITC has been confined mainly to laboratory cultures or animal studies.
"This
is groundbreaking research on two fronts: it suggests the anticancer properties
of watercress go beyond those attributable to PEITC and, more importantly, the
study is the first to demonstrate a direct correlation between eating watercress
and reducing one's susceptibility to cancer"
The
confidence to run this study came from a large body of existing evidence which
has demonstrated the anti-cancer potential of watercress, including a laboratory
study with human colon cancer cells, run by the same research group. Published
in May 2006, the study showed for the first time that a watercress extract had
beneficial effects on 'initiation', the DNA damage that triggers cancer cell
development, 'proliferation' or uncontrolled growth of cancer cells, and 'metastasis',
the spread of cancer cells. These are the three key stages of carcinogenesis,
the process that results in cancer. Watercress extract was also shown to trigger
cell death of cancerous calls - a process known as apoptosis.
UK TV
presenter and survivor of bowel cancer Lynn Faulds Wood commented: "The
research from the University of Ulster is very interesting - it's great to know
there are simple things that people can do - like eating watercress - which
could help them avoid getting cancers like bowel cancer in the future. It's
great that the watercress farmers want to raise awareness of bowel cancer, the
commonest cancer in Europe. Thousands of people die unnecessarily of bowel
cancer every year - with exercise and a good diet, many of them could
live."
Cultivated
in pure spring water, watercress has been revered as a superfood down the
centuries. Hippocrates, the father of medicine, is said to have located his
first hospital close to a stream to ensure fresh watercress to help treat his
patients. Greek soldiers were given it as a tonic before going into battle and
the 16th Century herbalist Culpepper claimed it could cleanse the blood. It is
brimming with more than 15 essential vitamins and minerals. Gram for gram, it
contains more iron than spinach, more vitamin C than oranges and more calcium
than milk.
Watercress
is the UK's most historic salad leaf and in the 19th Century was a staple part
of the working class diet, most often eaten for breakfast in a sandwich. If
people were too poor to buy bread, then they ate it on its own, which is why it
was sometimes known as "poor man's bread." Bunches were handheld and
eaten ice-cream cone style - the first "on the go food."
After decades of being pushed to the side of the plate as nothing more than a decorative garnish, watercress is currently enjoying a renaissance, with sales increasing by £18 million a year to £55 million. Consumers and celebrities alike are re-discovering its distinctive peppery taste and its amazing nutritional benefits. - Liz Hurley has been known to drink seven cups of watercress soup a day! (Febr. 2007) (Opm. Meer over waterkers.)