Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Tomatoes Have The Power To Ward Off Skin Cancer Risk, Say Scientists!

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Jul, 2017 12:08 PM
    Daily tomato consumption has been found to cut the development of skin cancer tumours by half in mice, scientists say.
     
     
    Researchers at Ohio State University in the US found that male mice fed a diet of 10 per cent tomato powder daily for 35 weeks, then exposed to ultraviolet light, experienced, on average, a 50 per cent decrease in skin cancer tumours compared to mice that ate no dehydrated tomato.
     
     
    The relationship between tomatoes and cancer is that dietary carotenoids, the pigmenting compounds that give tomatoes their colour, may protect skin against ultraviolet (UV) light damage, said Jessica Cooperstone, co-author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
     
     
    There was no significant difference in tumour number for the female mice in the study, researchers said.
     
     
     
     
    Previous research has shown that male mice develop tumours earlier after UV exposure and that their tumours are more numerous, larger and more aggressive.
     
     
    "This study showed us that we do need to consider sex when exploring different preventive strategies," said Tatiana Oberyszyn, a professor at Ohio State.
     
     
    "What works in men may not always work equally well in women and vice versa," said Oberyszyn.
     
     
    Previous human clinical trials suggest that eating tomato paste over time can dampen sunburns, perhaps thanks to carotenoids from the plants that are deposited in the skin of humans after eating, and may be able to protect against UV light damage, Cooperstone said.
     
     
    "Lycopene, the primary carotenoid in tomatoes, has been shown to be the most effective antioxidant of these pigments," she said.
     
     
    "However, when comparing lycopene administered from a whole food (tomato) or a synthesised supplement, tomatoes appear more effective in preventing redness after UV exposure, suggesting other compounds in tomatoes may also be at play," said Cooperstone.
     
     
    In the new study, the researchers found that only male mice fed dehydrated red tomatoes had reductions in tumour growth.
     
     
    Those fed diets with tangerine tomatoes, which have been shown to be higher in bioavailable lycopene in previous research, had fewer tumours than the control group, but the difference was not statistically significant. 

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer

    Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer
    The highest risks are associated with the heaviest drinking, but a considerable burden is experienced by drinkers with low to moderate consumption.

    Drinking Alcohol May Cause 7 Types Of Cancer

    Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians

    Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians
    90 per cent of doctors believe shaking can flood infant's brain - but courts still question the diagnosis

    Shaking Baby Could Be Deadly, Say Physicians

    How Does Zika Spread? Utah Infection Raises New Questions

    NEW YORK — Health officials are trying to unravel how a relative may have picked up a Zika infection from a Utah man who died.

    How Does Zika Spread? Utah Infection Raises New Questions

    5 Things To Know About E-Cigarettes

    5 Things To Know About E-Cigarettes
    Parents and doctors questioning teens about whether they smoke should also be asking if they're using e-cigarettes, which could be a gateway to nicotine addiction later on, says a pediatrician who led a new study.

    5 Things To Know About E-Cigarettes

    Woman Found To Spread Zika Through Sex For 1st Time

    Woman Found To Spread Zika Through Sex For 1st Time
    NEW YORK — A New York City woman infected her male partner with Zika virus through sex, the first time female-to-male transmission of the germ has been documented.

    Woman Found To Spread Zika Through Sex For 1st Time

    Digest This: Heavy People May Die Up To 3 Years Early

    Digest This: Heavy People May Die Up To 3 Years Early
    LONDON — Being too heavy may cost you your life — literally. Scientists say overweight people die one year earlier than expected and that moderately obese people die up to three years prematurely.

    Digest This: Heavy People May Die Up To 3 Years Early