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Olive oil may hinder cancer
process
By Amy Norton
New York
- People who use plenty of olive oil in their diets may be
helping to prevent damage to body cells that can eventually lead to
cancer, new research suggests. ADVERTISEMENT
In a study of 182 European men,
researchers found evidence that olive oil can reduce oxidative
damage to cells' genetic material, a process that can initiate
cancer development.
They say the findings may help
explain why rates of several cancers are higher in Northern Europe
than in Southern Europe, where olive oil is a dietary staple.
They also support advice to replace
saturated fats from foods like meat and butter with vegetable fats,
particularly olive oil, said study co-author Dr. Henrik E. Poulsen,
of Copenhagen University Hospital in Denmark.
He and his colleagues report the
findings in The FASEB Journal, a publication of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology.
The study included healthy men
between the ages of 20 and 60 from five European countries. For two
weeks, the men consumed a quarter cup of olive oil throughout each
day. At the end of the study, they showed an average 13 percent
reduction in a substance called 8oxodG, which is a marker of
oxidative damage to cells' DNA.
Such damage occurs when byproducts
of metabolism called reactive oxygen species overwhelm the body's
antioxidant defenses. Olive oil contains a number of compounds,
called phenols, believed to act as powerful antioxidants.
However, those compounds didn't
seem to account for the drop in DNA oxidative damage, according to
Poulsen's team. The men in the study used three different olive oils
with varying levels of antioxidant phenols, and oxidative damage
declined regardless of the phenol content.
Instead, the researchers suspect
that the monounsaturated fats in olive oil are behind the effect.
The findings, they say, suggest
that olive oil may be part of the reason that certain cancers,
including breast, colon, ovarian and prostate cancers, are less
common in Mediterranean countries than in Northern Europe.
At the beginning of the study, men
from Northern Europe had higher levels of 8oxodG than those from
Southern Europe. This is consistent, according to Poulsen's team,
with the expected effects of the olive-oil-rich "Mediterranean
diet."
However, Poulsen told Reuters
Health, the diet is more than just olive oil. Ideally, it's also
rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fish.
Moreover, regardless of its
benefits, he added, olive oil is no substitute for calorie control
and regular exercise. -- The
Associated Press
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