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Carrots May Cure Cancer

Haydn Fenton writes "A group of researchers from the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne in England have discovered a link between the naturally formed pesticide found in carrots, falcarinol, and a substantial reduction in cancerous tumor formation in rats. The researchers hope that the discovery will lead to new anti-cancer drugs and new methods of production to maximize falcarinol production in crops. Dr Kirsten Brandt one of the researchers told the press "We already know that carrots are good for us and can reduce the risk of cancer but until now we have not known which element of the vegetable has these special properties."

18 of 97 comments (clear)

  1. Decisions decisions by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 4, Funny

    Food prepared in England or dying of cancer.

    Both are horrible ways to go.

    1. Re:Decisions decisions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Fatty, sugary crap sold in the US or dying horribly from all diseases associated with extreme obesity.

  2. Carrots by Doctor+Sbaitso · · Score: 2, Funny

    My great-grandmother would always say "you should eat your carrots while they're still good for you."

    This was, of course, a joke having to do with all those "x food causes y disease" studies that seem to pop up on a weekly basis.

    Fortunately, it seems like carrots are still healthy to eat!

    --

    ---
    Hello, Slashdot user. My name is Dr. Sbaitso. I am here to help you.
  3. ... and in related news ... by bigsteve@dstc · · Score: 2, Funny

    ... Benson and Hedges announce the availability of a new line of carrot-tipped health cigarettes.

  4. Re:that may be right indeed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    have you ever seen a donky with cancer?

    My uncle was a real ass. Does that count?

  5. Re:a worry... by mc6809e · · Score: 2

    Just because one event happens after another does not mean that event 1 caused event 2.

    And yet, the only thing we can mean by "cause" is that event 1 always seems to be followed by event 2.

  6. Making good carrots by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 5, Informative

    I hated carrots until about 4 months ago when I had them prepared PROPERLY.

    Don't boil them, don't cook them too little. That's the secret.

    Get a skillet, put a little oil in it. 1 teaspoon or so. Add 200 grams of carrots. Add a cup of water. Cook the carrots on high heat until the water is gone. If the carrots aren't soft, add more water. When the carrots are soft, keep cooking them. The goal is to brown the sides of the carrots. Turn them over when they are brown on one side, and cook some more. Total cooking time is maybe 20 minutes on relatively high heat. Olive oil is good but you need to watch it because it can't take as much heat. It's important to cook them enough. 20 minutes AT LEAST. Not enough cooking makes carroty carrots. If you like carroty carrots, feel free. If you don't, keep on cooking.

    When they are cooked that way, the carrots don't taste so carroty, but actually become sweet. They are absolutely delicious like that, and you'll never go back to plain old steamed carrots.

    Yummmay!

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:Making good carrots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mushy carrots suck. In fact, cooked carrots of any kind suck (unless they are in carrot cake). Carrots, like revenge and Gespatcho, are a dish best served cold.

    2. Re:Making good carrots by Cabriel · · Score: 2, Funny

      Prepared properly? I just buy a bag at the store, and while I'm at home, I grab one from the bag and eat it. No preperation. It's the only way a man should ever eat his carrots. :P

    3. Re:Making good carrots by famebait · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Another good one which differs more from the steamed ones more than you'd think:

      Heat butter or olive oil or a mixture in a thick-bottomed pan, and chop carrots into wheels (or whatever size pieces you want), adding them into the fat as you go along.
      Let them fry a little in the fat whole you chop some onion coarsely, and add that too. Let fry a little more. Then add some green peas.

      The frying is just to cut cooking time, btw; you can dump it all in at once, but it will need to cook lonmger.

      Add only a little water (ebough to keep the bottom moist and from burning for a while, but you should nowhere near enough to see it initially). Season with salt, pepper, and optional herbs of choice.

      Cover and cook gently for at least 20 minutes. Sounds dead boring, but is a really nice side-dish.

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    4. Re:Making good carrots by Teppy · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is one of my favorite recipes: Begin by chopping three medium sized carrots into slivers.Sautee them as you suggest, but with some good quality butter, rather than olive oil. Add two cups of heavy cream and reduce until the cream thickens. Fry up a pound of bacon and chop into small pieces. Toss with some bread crumbs to firm this all up. Reserve the rendered bacon fat.

      Form the above mixture into small patties. Coat in a beer batter and deep-fry. Use the reserved bacon fat, along with the yolks of 6 eggs to make a bacon fat hollendaise. Cover the patties in hollendaise sauce, and serve, accompanied by milkshakes.

      I can't begin to tell you how relieved I was to discover that carrots are considered healthy.

  7. Actual research abstract/paper by FleaPlus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Here are links to the actual research abstract and paper.

    Abstract text:

    Inhibitory Effects of Feeding with Carrots or (-)-Falcarinol on Development of Azoxymethane-Induced Preneoplastic Lesions in the Rat Colon

    Morten Kobæk-Larsen, Lars P. Christensen, Werner Vach, Jelmera Ritskes-Hoitinga, and Kirsten Brandt

    The effects of intake of dietary amounts of carrot or corresponding amounts of (-)-(3R)-falcarinol from carrots on development of azoxymethane (AOM)-induced colon preneoplastic lesions were examined in male BDIX rats. Three groups of eight AOM-treated rats were fed the standard rat feed Altromin supplemented with either 10% (w/w) freeze-dried carrots with a natural content of 35 g falcarinol/g, 10% maize starch to which was added 35 g falcarinol/g purified from carrots, or 10% maize starch (control). After 18 weeks, the animals were euthanized and the colon was examined for tumors and aberrant crypt foci (ACF), which were classified into four size classes. Although the number of small ACF was unaffected by the feeding treatments, the numbers of lesions as a function of increasing size class decreased significantly in the rats that received one of the two experimental treatments, as compared with the control treatment. This indicates that the dietary treatments with carrot and falcarinol delayed or retarded the development of large ACF and tumors. The present study provides a new perspective on the known epidemiological associations between high intake of carrots and reduced incidence of cancers.

  8. esp. lung cancer. Maybe that's why they taste good by jago25_98 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They're supposed to be particularly good for lung cancer.

    My favorite vegetable has always been carrots.

    I have a gene increasing my chances of lung cancer.

    So my body seems to know what it needs.

  9. Re:a worry... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You might have a case if this wasn't a controlled experiment where the use of falcarinol was compared against a negative control (and falcarinol via carrots was compared against falcarinol alone). In this situation, it is pretty clearly causation.

    I agree that most medical real-world studies can have problems accounting for complicating factors, and that correlation doesn't always mean causation. However, in this case it was a nicely controlled experiment.

    Of course, we need to have confirmational experiments carried out, and tests to see if falcarinol has this effect in other types of animals (or cell cultures...then animals).

  10. I'll be... by N3wsByt3 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Why, I...never...!...hmpf...

    Are you insinuating you found some level of irony in my former post!?

    Maybe I *am* a religious bigot, you potentially unsensitive clod!!

    --
    --- "To pee or not to pee, that is the question." ---
  11. I thought... by KontinMonet · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...an apple a day keeps the doctor away.

    Trouble is, of course, if you buy a lot of apples and fall seriously ill, you're fucked...

    --
    Did he inhale?
  12. Main-lining brocolli better than heroin by Nicademous · · Score: 2

    Vegetables might be nasty, but they're good for you. Researchers have found similar tumor-squashing results by injecting a brocolli compound directly into cancer cells. The brocolli composition disrupts the cancer cells ability to divide, thus neutralizing the cancer.

    Only catch is, they're not sure yet about the effects of simply eating brocolli. For now, you'll have to inject. And mommy said needles were bad.

  13. Cooked carrots are disgusting by barakn · · Score: 2, Interesting
    ... 'cause they're way too sweet. The best way to make a palatable carrot for my particular taste buds is to peel them and eat them raw. The peel contains a bitter substance. Of course this may be an issue related to nontasters, tasters, and supertasters, which makes recommending a particular vegetable cooking style a crapshoot. You might think I'm lucky to be a supertaster, but my cancer risk is apparently higher.

    I at least agree with the "don't boil them" statement.

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