WebMD/ January 22, 2009, 11:00 AM

Blueberries May Shrink Tumors In Babies

Substances found in blueberries may inhibit the growth of blood vessel tumors in infants and children, a new study suggests.

Ohio State University researchers say they found that feeding a blueberry extract to mice with blood vessel tumors safely decreased the size of the tumors and improved survival.

The tumors in question are among the most common tumors in infants, according to the report in the journal Antioxidants & Redox Signaling. In infants, the tumors can be disfiguring and in some cases threaten the health of a child.

Mice with blood vessel tumors that were fed the blueberry extract lived twice as long as mice that did not get the substance and had tumors 60 percent smaller than mice that did not receive blueberry extract treatment, the authors say.

Tumors made from the types of cells in question are found in blood vessels and affect 3 percent of children, the researchers say. The tumors, they add, usually occur within four weeks of birth and often affect premature infants.

"This work provides the first evidence demonstrating that blueberry extract can limit tumor formation by inhibiting the formation of blood vessels and inhibiting certain signaling pathways," Gayle Gordillo, MD, principal investigator of the Ohio State team, says in a news release. "Oral administration of blueberry extract represents a potential therapeutic strategy for treating endothelial cell tumors in children."

Gordillo says the tumors are similar to a large, blood-filled sponge. Current treatments can suppress the immune system, she says, and cause developmental delays.

Removing the tumors surgically is generally avoided because that process could cause patients to bleed to death, she says. Thus, many families opt to accept deformities caused by the tumors.

"Our hope is that if we feed blueberry juice to a child with this type of tumor, we can intervene and shrink the tumor before it becomes a big problem," she says.

"Our next step is a pilot study with humans to see if we can measure response to the treatment using imaging techniques and the monitoring of chemical changes in the urine."

The findings could have implications in other cancers, including breast, melanoma, ovarian, and head and neck, Gordillo says.
By Bill Hendrick
Reviewed by Louise Chang
?2005-2008 WebMD, LLC. All rights reserved
© 2009 WebMD, LLC.. All Rights Reserved.
6 Comments Add a Comment
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mahdeealoo says:
As natural food/herb proponents know, blueberries are a fabulous detoxifier. And depending upon the toxin, there are many natural detoxifiers you can find by simply searching for them on line. Among them to clear specific heavy metals; miso, sea vegetables, kelp, and chlorella. A specific example is of fresh cilantro to help rid mercury. The list is too long but easy to find on line.

Tumors defined by natural healers are pockets of toxin. So detox the body and tumors will clear, along with potential for other maladies that are common to people whose diets are less than perfect these days. That includes most of us.
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rielle62 says:
BLUEBERRIES CAUSE AUTISM
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rielle62 says:
BLUEBERRIES CAUSE AUTISM
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timothyone-2009 says:
And how will Congress help BigPharm in hiding blueberry goodness from us so it can be repackaged as a patented drug?
Forget all that!!! LET''S SING PEOPLE....
America, America, God shed his grace on thee, and crown thy good with mumble, mumble mumble... Come on people, wave them flags... brotherhood, mumble, mumble, mumble...

Ok, now let''s go check stock prices. I hear the FDA is about to approve a new diet drug made from a secret combination of sea salt and cow manure. Shhh!!
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timothyone-2009 says:
Can anyone guess exactly how BigPharm will monopolize the blueberry market and bury this story on the fruits'' benefits from future populations? There just has to be a way to force us to buy a pill and prevent us from simply using a cheap juice. Think man, think, there''s a billion in it for you!
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shanev137 says:
It''s been known for quite awhile that blueberries are considered a superfood.
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