Jeremy Moore
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PHILADELPHIA (April 06, 2009)– Three-day-old broccoli sprouts, a widely available human food, suppressed Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) infections, according to a report in Cancer Prevention Research, a journal of the American Association for Cancer Research. H. pylori infections are one of the most common bacterial infections worldwide and are a major cause of stomach cancer.
The
cancer protective effects of sulforaphane, a phytochemical from
broccoli, have been known for almost two decades, but this is the first
study to show an effect of broccoli in humans on the bacterial
infection that leads to stomach cancer. In this study, researchers
enrolled 48 Helicobacter-infected Japanese men and women and randomly
assigned them to eat 70 grams of fresh broccoli sprouts daily for eight
weeks or an equivalent amount of alfalfa sprouts.
"Broccoli
has recently entered the public awareness as a preventive dietary
agent. This study supports the emerging evidence that broccoli sprouts
may be able to prevent cancer in humans, not just in lab animals," said
Jed Fahey, Sc.D., a faculty research associate in the Department of
Pharmacology at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine.
Researchers assessed the severity of H. pylori infection at enrollment, and again at four and eight weeks using standard breath, serum and stool tests. H. pylori
levels were significantly lower at eight weeks on all three measures
among those patients who had eaten broccoli sprouts, while they
remained the same for patients who had eaten alfalfa sprouts.
A reduction in H. pylori
is expected to lead to a reduction in stomach cancer due to their
well-established cause-and-effect link. Stomach cancer has a grim
prognosis and is the second most common and the second deadliest cancer
worldwide.
Source: American Association for Cancer Research
Original article: Akinori Yanaka, Jed W. Fahey, Atsushi Fukumoto, Mari Nakayama, Souta Inoue, Songhua Zhang, Masafumi Tauchi, Hideo Suzuki, Ichinosuke Hyodo and Masayuki Yamamoto. Dietary Sulforaphane-Rich Broccoli Sprouts Reduce Colonization and Attenuate Gastritis in Helicobacter pylori–Infected Mice and Humans. Cancer Prevention Research 2, 353, April 1, 2009. doi: 10.1158/1940-6207.
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