Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Eat Grapes To Kill Colon Cancer Cells: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 23 Jun, 2017 10:57 PM
    Start eating grapes daily, as a research has revealed that the compounds, found in the skin and seeds of grapes, may help in killing colon cancer stem cells.
     
    The compounds, resveratrol, which are found in grape skins and seeds, could also eventually lead to treatments to help prevent colon cancer, said Jairam K.P. Vanamala from Penn State Hershey Cancer Institute.
     
    "The combination of resveratrol and grape seed extract is very effective at killing colon cancer cells," Vanamala added.
     
    The researchers suggest that the findings could pave the way for clinical testing of the compounds on human colon cancer, which is the second most common cancer in women and the third in men.
     
    If successful, the compounds could then be used in a pill to help prevent colon cancer and lessen the recurrence of the disease in colon cancer survivors.
     
    Vanamala noted that according to cancer stem-cell theory, cancerous tumors are driven by cancer stem cells. Cancer stem cells are capable of self-renewal, cellular differentiation and maintain their stem cell-like characteristics even after invasion and metastasis.
     
    When taken separately in low doses, resveratrol and grape seed extract are not as effective against cancer stem-cell suppression as when they are combined together, according to the researchers.
     
    "This also connects well with a plant-based diet that is structured so that the person is getting a little bit of different types of plants, of different parts of the plant and different colors of the plant," said Vanamala.
     
    For the animal study, they separated 52 mice with colon cancer tumors into three groups, including a control group and groups that were fed either the grape compounds or sulindac, an anti-inflammatory drug, which was chosen because a previous study showed it significantly reduced the number of tumors in humans.
     
    The incidence of tumors was suppressed in the mice consuming the grape compounds alone by 50 percent, similar to the rate in the group consuming the diet with sulindac.
     
    The research is published in journal of BMC Complementary and Alternative Medicine.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Required: 'The Pokemon Catcher'. Bengaluru Job Site Posts Vacancy

    Bengaluru-based Babajob, an online livelihood marketplace has advertised for a new job category 'The Pokemon Catcher' with applicants required to have "a vast knowledge of the Pokemon database."

    Required: 'The Pokemon Catcher'. Bengaluru Job Site Posts Vacancy

    Banks And Other Industries Embrace Biometrics To Boost Security, Convenience

    In the not-too-distant future, your bank will be able to prevent fraud by learning how you type, your car will unlock when it senses the electrical activity of your heart and the security system at your office will recognize your facial features.

    Banks And Other Industries Embrace Biometrics To Boost Security, Convenience

    Trial For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Infant Remains In Storage Locker On Hold

    Trial For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Infant Remains In Storage Locker On Hold
    WINNIPEG — The trial of a Winnipeg woman accused of concealing the remains of six infants in a storage locker is on hold until the end of August.

    Trial For Winnipeg Woman Accused Of Hiding Infant Remains In Storage Locker On Hold

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'
    But on Pogey Beach — a fictional soap opera based in a beach on Prince Edward Island's north shore — it's not unusual to see an Islander who collects employment insurance sinking their steel toe shoes into the red sand.

    Raunchy East Coast Web Series Makes Plans For A Movie: 'Pogey Beach'

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree
    Firefighters in Clarksboro say the woman climbed a tree Tuesday night while playing "Pokemon Go" on her smartphone inside the Eglington Cemetery.

    Woman Trying To Catch Pokemon In Cemetery Gets Stuck In Tree

    East West Thrift store: Give Where You Live

    East West Thrift store:  Give Where You Live

    A new thrift store, recently opened in Surrey, sells everything from Indian and western wear to r...

    East West Thrift store: Give Where You Live