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EAT TO LIVE NUTRITION INTERVENTION Cancer-fighting food for thought Cancer prevention news flash: Recent studies suggest that making a few easy changes to your diet - eating more of some foods, less of others - may bolster your defenses against some malignancies. EAT MORE BEANS Among 3,409 men and women studied at M. D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, those who ate the most beans, rich in plant estrogens, were 46 percent less likely to get lung cancer. EAT MORE YELLOW, ORANGE AND DARK GREEN LEAFY VEGGIES People who ate more than five daily servings of these vegetables had half the pancreatic cancer risk of those who ate two or fewer, a University of California, San Francisco, study of 2,227 men and women found. Suspected protectors: fiber, folate, and vitamins E and C. EAT LESS GRILLED MEAT Two carcinogens -- form in meat under high temps. In a University of Minnesota study of 867 adults, those who consumed the highest amount of these chemicals - based on how often they ate grilled meat - had up to 2.4 times the risk of pancreatic cancer as those who ate the least. QUANTITY Obesity may explain the .5 percent yearly rise in breast cancer cases in women older than age 49, the American Cancer Society says. Postmenopausal women usually have less circulating estrogen, which should lower their cancer risk. But because fat cells release estrogen, overweight women over 50 may lose their advantage. SNEAK IN THE GOOD STUFF Get more cancer-fighting produce: Add orange slices to green salads, use cauliflower in mashed potatoes, stir beans into soups, and snip fresh spinach into pasta dishes. - Rodale Copyright 2006. All rights reserved by New York Times Syndication Sales Corp. This material may not be published, broadcast or redistributed in any manner. |
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