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Vitamins and Minerals Role in
Preventing and Fighting Cancer
Beta carotene may be
beneficial in its natural form, bound up with other constituents
of food, but may not be as beneficial when it is isolated as a supplement. It is also
possible that other carotenoids may be the real cancer
inhibitors, and that they may be more efficacious against some
types of carcinogens and tumors than others.
Calcium appears to have
some preventive value especially with colon cancer. Researchers propose several mechanisms to explain how calcium
acts as an anti-cancer warrior in the colon; these include
inhibiting cell growth and/or disarming potential toxins by
binding them to fatty acids.
Selenium is
being actively studied by epidemiologists and basic scientists with
mixed results. Interest was sparked by epidemiologic evidence that
population groups with higher selenium intakes have less cancer than
those who consume little of this trace mineral.
Vitamin A is what
the body produces when it metabolizes carotenoids; it's also found in
dairy products and animal fat. Some studies indicate that vitamin A
itself, either from food or supplements, may also offer some cancer
protection.
Vitamin D's
role is unsettled right now; early studies indicated that it might
provide some protection against colon cancer, but subsequent ones
weren't as promising.
Folate (also known as
folic acid) is best known for its role in the formation of
healthy red blood cells. Now there's compelling epidemiologic
evidence that people with higher folic acid levels are less
likely than others to develop colon cancer and precancerous colon
polyps.
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