Onions, garlic linked
to lower cancer risks
NEW YORK (Reuters) - People who flavour their diets with plenty
of onions and garlic might have lower odds of several types of cancer,
a new study suggests. In an analysis of eight studies from Italy
and Switzerland, researchers found that older adults with the highest
onion and garlic intakes had the lowest risks of a number of cancers
-- including colon, ovarian and throat cancers.
The findings, which appear in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition,
are in line with some past research. But those studies were mainly
conducted in China, and it is unclear if the results are different
in Western countries. Dietary habits are substantially different
in China, with garlic intake, in particular, being far higher, Dr.
Carlotta Galeone, the lead author of the new study, told Reuters
Health.
These
latest findings suggest the anti-cancer benefit of these vegetables
extend to Western populations, according to Galeone, a researcher
at the Mario Negri Institute of Pharmacologic Research in Milan,
Italy. It's possible, for instance, that onion and garlic lovers
also have an overall diet that protects against cancer, according
to Galeone and her colleagues.
They note that animal studies
and lab experiments with cancer cells have found that certain compounds
in onions and garlic may inhibit the growth of tumors. Sulfur compounds
found in garlic and antioxidant flavonoids in onions are among the
potentially protective substances.
The current findings are based
on results from eight studies conducted in Italy and Switzerland.
Each study compared healthy older adults to patients with a particular
form of cancer, asking participants for detailed information on
their diets, physical activity and other lifestyle habits.
When it came to colon cancer,
Galeone's team found that men and women who ate seven or more servings
of onions per week had less than half the risk of those who shunned
the vegetable. Similarly, garlic lovers were a quarter less likely
to develop the disease than people who maintained garlic-free diets.
The vegetables were also linked to lower risks of cancers of the
mouth, throat, kidneys and ovaries. Given what's known about the
biological activity of some onion and garlic compounds, it wouldn't
be a bad idea to spice up your diet with the vegetables, according
to Galeone.
It's probably wise to mix
them with plenty of other vegetables, however. Some research has
found that garlic and tomatoes may have "synergistic"
cancer-fighting effects, Galeone and her colleagues note.
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