Army commander warns enemies against making mistakes about Iran                  Bomber kills seven, injures 13 in Iraq                  Iran underlines expansion of ties with Qatar, Vietnam                  Mottaki bids farewell to outgoing Iraqi ambassador                  Reinforcement of Iran's security cooperation with neighboring countries                  Organized Cyber War Network Members Detained                  Roadside mine kills 3 Afghan civilians                  Socialists defeat Sarkozy's UMP in regional polls‎                  Thousands attend anti-Berlusconi protest                  India’s AAD Interceptor missile fails to take off                 

Home
News
Commentaries
Interviews
Articles
Photo Gallery
Advanced Search
Iran
Islam
Political
The U.S.
Your Letters
Music
Voice of Justice
 
Men who eat soy may have lower lung cancer risk Print
Sunday, 07 February 2010 08:04

According to a new study, men who don't smoke and eat a lot of soy may have a lower risk of lung cancer.

According to American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, soy contains isoflavones, which act similarly to the hormone estrogen, and may have anti-cancer qualities in hormone-related cancers of the breast and prostate, the researchers note in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Cells in the lung have properties that suggest they may also respond to isoflavones.

Dr. Taichi Shimazu, of the National Cancer Center in Tokyo, and colleagues studied more than 36,000 Japanese men and more than 40,000 Japanese women, 45 to 74 years old and free of cancer at the start of the study.

The researchers followed the women for about 11 years, after surveying their food intake, smoking status, medical history, and other lifestyle factors between 1995 and 1999.

Overall rates of lung cancer were small: 481 men -- or about one in 75 -- and 178 women, or about one in 225 -- were diagnosed during the 11 years of the study.

Among the slightly more than 13,000 men who never smoked, there were 22 lung cancer cases among men who ate the least soy, and just 13 lung cancer cases among those who ate the most. Shimazu said men's soy intake from food varied widely, from about 34 to about 162 grams per day.

After taking a number of factors into account, the risk about halved in the highest versus the lowest intake group.

There were even fewer lung cancer cases among women, so researchers could draw no conclusions about their risks.

 

Add comment


Security code
Refresh

 
Other news . . .

Photo Gallery

 


 

Videos

Interviews

© 2010 English Radio