Wednesday, 24 April 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Manish Tiwari will win by a Huge margin: Jarnail Singh Amman is back with Romantic Track 'Dil Kare' Congress is working to divide the country in the name of religion and caste: Dr. Subhash Sharma PM Modi synonymous with trust, hope, credibility: Devender Singh Rana Atal Dulloo reviews the working & Public Outreach activities of Information Department General, Police Observer interact with Zonal, Sectoral Magistrates, BLOs of district Reasi Div Com Jammu, ADGP visit Rajouri, review preparations for elections Lt Governor addresses seminar on National Education Policy 2020 at Ghazipur DC Bandipora Shakeel ul Rehman Rather reviews Floriculture, Fisheries, Sericulture Departments DC Bandipora Shakeel ul Rehman Rather reviews performance of AHD DC Bandipora Shakeel ul Rehman Rather reviews Agriculture Sector DEO Bandipora Shakeel ul Rehman Rather inspects EVM, material strong room DEO Bandipora Shakeel ul Rehman Rather reviews poll preparedness Harnit Singh Sudan (IAS 2023) Interacts with IAS/JKAS Aspirants Marathon under SVEEP held at Samba to maximize voter awareness DEO Kupwara reviews transportation of polling staff, EVMs DEO Kulgam flags-off cycle rally under SVEEP to raise voter awareness 5 more candidates file nominations for Srinagar Lok Sabha seat TV Serial Actor Abhinav Shukla Net Worth 2024 | 5 Dariya News DC visits Lalton & Jodhan grain markets to oversee wheat procurement DC orders officers to intensify field visits for smooth procurement operations at ground level

 

Diet may help halt breast cancer spread : Study

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

New York , 08 Feb 2018

Limiting the intake of foods rich in asparagine including dairy, beef, poultry, eggs, fish, nuts, soy and whole grains, while increasing the intake of fruits and vegetables may potentially help halt the spread of a deadly type of breast cancer, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, suggests.Asparagine is an amino acid -- the building blocks that cells use to make proteins. The findings showed that limiting amino acid asparagine in laboratory mice with triple-negative breast cancer dramatically reduced the ability of the cancer to travel to distant sites in the body. "Our study adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests diet can influence the course of the disease," said lead authpr Simon Knott, Associate Director at the Cedars-Sinai Medical Centre -- a US-based non-profit. "This study may have implications not only for breast cancer, but for many metastatic cancers," added Ravi Thadhani, from the varsity.In the study, published in the journal Nature, the team discovered that the appearance of asparagine synthetase -- the enzyme cells used to make asparagine -- in a primary tumour was strongly associated with later cancer spread.

Further, metastasis was found greatly limited by reducing asparagine synthetase, treatment with the chemotherapy drug L-asparaginase, or dietary restriction. When the lab mice were given food rich in asparagine, the cancer cells spread more rapidly."The study suggests that changes in diet might impact both how an individual responds to primary therapy and their chances of lethal disease spreading later in life," said Gregory J. Hannon, professor at the University of Cambridge in England.Researchers are now considering conducting an early-phase clinical trial in which healthy participants would consume a low-asparagine diet. If the findings are confirmed in human cells, limiting the amount of asparagine cancer patients ingest could be a potential strategy to augment existing therapies and to prevent the spread of breast cancer, Knott added.

 

Tags: STUDY , HEALTH

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD