September 20, 2007 6:00 PM
- Text
Pomegranate Juice vs. Prostate Cancer?
Natural chemicals in pomegranate juice may slow the growth
of prostate cancer, according to scientists at the University of California at
Los Angeles (UCLA).
The key pomegranate chemicals, called ellagitannins, are also found in foods
including strawberries, raspberries, and muscadine grapes, note Navindra
Seeram, PhD, and colleagues.
Their theory is that when someone drinks pomegranate juice, the juice
releases ellagitannins, which get digested into chemicals called urolithins,
which may fight prostate cancer.
Seeram's team tested that notion in their lab.
The scientists bought pomegranates and made their own pomegranate extract
from pomegranate skin. They closely measured the ellagitannins in their
pomegranate juice.
Next, the researchers tested pomegranate juice against human prostate cancer
cells grafted into male mice.
The scientists fed the pomegranate juice to some of the mice. They injected
the pomegranate juice into other mice's abdomens.
For comparison, the researchers fed or injected other mice with a placebo
solution containing no pomegranate juice.
The prostate tumors grew more slowly in the mice that got the pomegranate
juice orally or by injection, compared with mice that got the placebo.
Finally, the mice got urolithins orally or by abdominal injection. Those
pomegranate-derived chemicals gathered in the mice's prostate, colon, and
intestinal tissues more than in other organs.
Add it all up, and it looks like pomegranate ellagitannins may slow (but not
totally destroy) prostate cancer in mice.
More studies are needed to see if pomegranate juice works the same way in
people, Seeram and colleagues write in the Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
B)2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
© 2007 WebMD, LLC.. All Rights Reserved. of prostate cancer, according to scientists at the University of California at
Los Angeles (UCLA).
The key pomegranate chemicals, called ellagitannins, are also found in foods
including strawberries, raspberries, and muscadine grapes, note Navindra
Seeram, PhD, and colleagues.
Their theory is that when someone drinks pomegranate juice, the juice
releases ellagitannins, which get digested into chemicals called urolithins,
which may fight prostate cancer.
Seeram's team tested that notion in their lab.
The scientists bought pomegranates and made their own pomegranate extract
from pomegranate skin. They closely measured the ellagitannins in their
pomegranate juice.
Next, the researchers tested pomegranate juice against human prostate cancer
cells grafted into male mice.
The scientists fed the pomegranate juice to some of the mice. They injected
the pomegranate juice into other mice's abdomens.
For comparison, the researchers fed or injected other mice with a placebo
solution containing no pomegranate juice.
The prostate tumors grew more slowly in the mice that got the pomegranate
juice orally or by injection, compared with mice that got the placebo.
Finally, the mice got urolithins orally or by abdominal injection. Those
pomegranate-derived chemicals gathered in the mice's prostate, colon, and
intestinal tissues more than in other organs.
Add it all up, and it looks like pomegranate ellagitannins may slow (but not
totally destroy) prostate cancer in mice.
More studies are needed to see if pomegranate juice works the same way in
people, Seeram and colleagues write in the Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry.
By Miranda Hitti
Reviewed by Louise Chang
B)2005-2006 WebMD, Inc. All rights reserved
Add A Comment +
Popular Now in Health
- Nerve stimulation lets spine-injured rats to walk
- Men's offices more bacteria-ridden than women's?
- FDA: High fructose corn syrup isn't "corn sugar"
- NYC plans ban on sodas larger than 16 ounces
- Skin cancer self-exam: What to look for (PHOTOS)
- Smells like teen spirit? Age may have a scent
- Christina Hendricks: Too Big for Hollywood?
- Flame retardant found in common foods
- Ga. woman battling flesh-eating bacteria speaks
- Report: 10-year-old Colombian girl gives birth
- Less couch, more veggies tied to healthier habits
- Consumer Reports rates top sunscreens for 2012
- Taking aspirin cuts skin cancer risk, study shows
- For Women, Beer and Psoriasis Link
- Marvel creates "Blue Ear" superhero for deaf boy
- Salmonella dog food scare causes recall






