Researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio (Texas, USA) report that consuming two ounces of walnuts a day may protect against prostate cancer. Russel Reiter and colleagues completed a study in which the researchers injected immune-deficient mice with human prostate cancer cells. Within three to four weeks, tumors typically start to grow in a large number of these mice. Some of the mice were fed a typical diet used in animal studies, to which was added a small amount of walnuts (equivalent to a human eating about 2 ounces, or two handfuls, a day). Whereas 3 of 16 mice (18%) eating the walnut-enriched diet developed prostate tumors, 14 of 32 mice (44%) fed the non-walnut control diet developed tumors. Notably, the final average tumor size in the walnut-fed animals was roughly one-fourth the average size of the prostate tumors that developed in the mice eating the control diet.
Walnuts May Ward Off Prostate Cancer
Reiter RJ, Tan DX, Manchester LC, Korkmaz A, Fuentes-Broto L, Hardman WE, Rosales-Corral SA, Qi W. “A Walnut-Enriched Diet Reduces the Growth of LNCaP Human Prostate Cancer Xenografts in Nude Mice,” Cancer Invest. 2013 Jun 11.
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