Phytobites
-- Quick Facts on Phytochemicals
G.
Douglas Andersen, DC, DACBSP, CCN
Volume
17, number 7, 3/22/99, page 17
Interesting facts about phytochemicals.
For years chiropractors have recommended the consumption of whole foods
to their patients. Our forefathers did not really know why eating a "natural"
diet was good; they just knew that patients who ate diets rich in fresh
fruits and vegetables, and low in processed and refined foods, needed
less treatment. Science is now beginning to unlock the reasons for what
our profession has observed for the better part of a century. We now know
that fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains, seeds and nuts contain thousands
of phytochemicals, many of which are very beneficial to humans. The following
are a few more reasons to remind, plead, nag, beg, or demand that our
patients improve their diets.
· The average tomato contains 10,000 phytochemicals.1
· Regular consumption of tomato reduces cancer
of the esophagus, oral cavity, stomach, colon, and rectum. This is based
on two studies, the first comparing 2,709 cases of digestive tract cancer
to 2,879 hospital admitted controls, and the second comparing 1,953 cases
of colorectal cancer to 4,154 controls.2
· The National Cancer Institute recommends that
Americans consume at least three servings of vegetables and two servings
of fruit per day. Currently only one out of 11 Americans are meeting this
daily recommendation.1
· There are over 60 flavonoids in citrus fruits.
These flavonoids have anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antiblood clotting,
and antitumor properties.3
· After whole wheat flour has been processed into
white flour there is a 200-300% loss of phytochemical content.3
· When I was in chiropractic college I was taught
that the definition of enriched white flour was as follows: "Take
15 things out [from whole wheat flour], then put eight things back in."
It turns out that refining flour results in losses of many more than seven
nutrients. Some of the phytochemical families we have now discovered in
grains include various types of plant sterols, phytoestrogens, tocotrienols,
ligans, phytases and saponins.3
· Sulfides in garlic and onions, diphiolthiones
and isothiocyanates in cabbage and broccoli, curcumins in turmeric and
ginger, phthalides in celery seed, and liminoids in citrus all stimulate
glutathione S-transferase activity, which in turn has very powerful anticancer
properties.3
· Phytoestrogens are valuable in the prevention
and treatment of menopausal symptoms, heart disease, cancer, and osteoporosis.
· There are three major classes (so far) of phytoestrogens:
isoflavones, which are soy based; ligans, which are found in grains and
seeds; and coumestans, which are found in sprouts.
· Isoflavones are found in soybeans and other
soy products like soy flour, soy protein, soy milk, tofu, and tempeh.
Soy sauce is not a source of isoflavones.4
· In the human gastrointestinal tract, isoflavone
precursors are converted to heterocyclic phenols, which are then converted
by intestinal bacteria to genistein and diadzein, which are the most estrogenically
active isoflavones.4
· Ligans are found in grains, seeds (especially
flax seeds), fruits, and vegetables.4
· In the human gastrointestinal tract ligan precursors
are converted to heterocyclic phenols, which are then converted by intestinal
bacteria to enterolactone and enterodiol, the most estrogenically active
members of the ligan family.4
· Ipriflavones are synthetic compounds derived
from isoflavones. At 600 mg per day in divided doses they can inhibit
bone loss in postmenopausal women.5
Finally, as if we still do not need more evidence that consuming fresh
fruits and vegetables is good for us, an interesting Italian epidemiological
study was published last year. Researchers looked at the vegetable consumption
of over 46,000 men and women 15 and older and found that those who consumed
the most vegetables had the lowest rates of angina, arthritis, asthma,
bronchitis, cirrhosis, gallstones, heart attack, kidney stones, and peptic
ulcer.6 Please note that these people ate whole
vegetables filled with phytochemicals and not processed vegetable pills.
If you sell vegetable pills, just make sure you tell your patients the
truth. That we have no idea if swallowing a daily handful of vegetable
pills will have the same effect as consuming 35 to 70 servings of fruits
and vegetables per week; that we have no idea how many undiscovered phytochemicals
are lost, altered, denatured, or destroyed during the processing required
to make a vegetable into a pill.
If my patients want to consume fruits and vegetables in a processed form,
I recommend that they chop their vegetables into salads and blend their
fruit into smoothies.
References
1. Wolf, A. M., and A. M. D. Wolf. Phytochemicals: The newest frontier
in disease prevention. Hospital Medicine. August 1998. 55-56.
2. La Vecchia, C. Mediterranean epidemiological evidence on tomatoes and
the prevention of digestive tract cancers. Proceedings of the Society
for Experimental Biology and Medicine. 1998. 218:125-128.
3. Craig, Winston J. Phytochemicals: Guardians of our health. Journal
of the American Dietetic Association. October 1997. 97(10/Supplement 2):
S199-S204.
4. Murkies, A. Phytoestrogens--What is the current knowledge? Australian
Family Physician. 1998. 27(Supplement 1): S47-S51.
5. Gennari, C., et al. Effect of ipriflavone -- a synthetic derivative
of natural isoflavones -- on bone mass loss in early years after menopause.
Menopause: The Journal of the North American Menopause Society. 1998.
5(1): 9-15.
6. Lavecchia, C., et al. Vegetable Consumption and Risk of Chronic Disease.
Epidemiology. March 1998. 9(2): 208-210.
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2004, G. Douglas Andersen, DC, DACBSP, CCN, 916 E. Imperial Hwy, Brea,
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