http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=healthNews&storyID=2005-11-2
3T184130Z_01_KRA367252_RTRUKOC_0_US-DAIRY-CANCER.xml
High-fat dairy food may lower colorectal cancer risk
Wed Nov 23, 2005 1:41 PM ET
By Will Boggs, MD
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have high levels of high-fat
dairy foods and conjugated linoleic acid, a component of dairy foods,
in their diet may have a reduced risk of colorectal cancer, according
to a report in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
"High-fat dairy, and not only low-fat dairy, may be beneficial," Dr.
Susanna C. Larsson from Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, told Reuters
Health.
Larsson and colleagues examined the association between long-term
consumption of high-fat dairy foods and the rate of colorectal cancer
among more than 60,000 women between 40 and 76 years old who
participated in the Swedish Mammography Cohort.
Women who consumed at least four servings per day of high-fat dairy
foods had a 41-percent lower risk of colorectal cancer than did women
who consumed less than one serving of high-fat dairy foods per day, the
authors report.
The association remained after accounting for other risk factors,
including alcohol consumption, family history of colorectal cancer,
smoking, physical activity, and the use of multivitamin supplements,
aspirin, oral contraceptives, and postmenopausal hormones.
Further analysis of the data identified a relationship between levels
of high-fat dairy food in the diet and extent of colorectal cancer
risk, with each additional two servings of high-fat dairy foods
reducing the risk of colorectal cancer by 13 percent.
The lowest risk of colorectal cancer was associated with high
consumption of cheese, the results indicate.
Increased dietary linoleic acid levels also correlated with decreased
colorectal cancer risk, the investigators observed. Subjects who had
the highest levels of dietary linoleic acid had a 29-percent reduction
in risk compared with subjects who had the lowest levels of linoleic
acid.
"More research on conjugated linoleic acid and high-fat dairy foods in
relation to colorectal cancer as well as other cancers and diseases are
needed before we can recommend increased consumption of high-fat
dairy," Larsson added.
SOURCE: American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, October 2005.
*****
TC
Jim Chinnis - 25 Nov 2005 17:59 GMT
"TC" <tunderbar@hotmail.com> wrote in part:
>http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=healthNews&storyID=2005-11-2
3T184130Z_01_KRA367252_RTRUKOC_0_US-DAIRY-CANCER.xml
>
>High-fat dairy food may lower colorectal cancer risk
>Wed Nov 23, 2005 1:41 PM ET
Could be due to increased calcium intake, which would work just as well with
non-fat dairy products.
--
Jim Chinnis Warrenton, Virginia, USA jchinnis@alum.mit.edu
Jim Chinnis - 25 Nov 2005 18:58 GMT
Jim Chinnis <jchinnis@alum.mit.edu> wrote in part:
>"TC" <tunderbar@hotmail.com> wrote in part:
>
[quoted text clipped - 5 lines]
>Could be due to increased calcium intake, which would work just as well with
>non-fat dairy products.
Actually, the association between calcium intake and the # of servings of
full-fat dairy is pretty weak. I just read the paper and there's a decent
case made for CLA and possibly other components in whole dairy products
leading to lower colorectal cancer rates.
--
Jim Chinnis Warrenton, Virginia, USA jchinnis@alum.mit.edu
nospam@aol.com - 25 Nov 2005 20:01 GMT
>"TC" <tunderbar@hotmail.com> wrote in part:
>
[quoted text clipped - 7 lines]
>--
>Jim Chinnis Warrenton, Virginia, USA jchinnis@alum.mit.edu
Could be the dairy. People the world over have been trying to preserve dairy
products for consumption because of its benefits. Milk products can spoil and
become unusable but can also be preserved and used by people for benefit.
Ora