Literature DB >> 376103

Mechanism of action of diet as a carcinogen.

J H Weisburger.   

Abstract

Stomach cancer in the United States has decreased over the last 50 years. It is still a major type of neoplasm in Japan, Eastern and Northern Europe, and parts of Latin America. Current concepts suggest that the reduction of gastric cancer in the U. S. stems from an increased consumption of foods with vitamin C on a year round basis, which is shown to antagonize the formation of putative gastric carcinogens. Risk factors for large bowel, breast, and prostate cancer are totally different from those for gastric cancer and thus are amenable to independent controls, with the goal of ultimately reducing the risk and preventing these major cancers in man. Current research aims to identify the nature of the mutagenic materials obtained during the frying of protein-containing foods. This process may be involved in the generation of carcinogens for cancer of the colon, breast, and prostate. Cancer of the colon is subject to somewhat different controlling elements than cancer of the breast because of the nature of the cell kinetics governing these tissues. Thus, the mechanism of action of diet involves lifestyle. The type, quality, and mode of cooking of food, particularly, play important roles in the etiology of the main human cancers in the gastrointestinal tract and the endocrine-sensitive organs.

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Year:  1979        PMID: 376103     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(197905)43:5+<1987::aid-cncr2820430706>3.0.co;2-#

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  3 in total

1.  Nutrition and cancer: mechanisms of genotoxic and epigenetic carcinogens in nutritional carcinogenesis.

Authors:  J H Weisburger; C Horn
Journal:  Bull N Y Acad Med       Date:  1982-04

2.  Nutrition and cancer--on the mechanisms bearing on causes of cancer of the colon, breast, prostate, and stomach.

Authors:  J H Weisburger; B S Reddy; P Hill; L A Cohen; E L Wynder; N E Spingarn
Journal:  Bull N Y Acad Med       Date:  1980-10

3.  Tumor enhancers: underestimated factors in the epidemiology of lifestyle-associated cancers.

Authors:  E L Wynder
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  1983-04       Impact factor: 9.031

  3 in total

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