Nutritional approach to cancer prevention with emphasis on vitamins, antioxidants, and carotenoids
Open Access
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Elsevier in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition
- Vol. 53 (1) , 226S-237S
- https://doi.org/10.1093/ajcn/53.1.226s
Abstract
The main human cancers are associated with complex life-style related causative, enhancing, and inhibiting factors. Tobacco smoking or chewing exposes humans to genotoxic carcinogens and to promoting substances. Likewise, Western dietary traditions involve certain carcinogens and promoters, whereas Oriental traditions implicate other carcinogens and promoters. Importantly, in virtually all situations regular intake of fruits and vegetables appreciably lowers the risk of cancer. This paper reviews the causes of the main human cancers and analyzes the mechanisms of the protective effects of fruits and vegetables. Prevention of human cancer requires the definition of optimal levels of recommended daily allowances of micronutrients.Keywords
This publication has 73 references indexed in Scilit:
- Serum levels ofβ‐carotene, Vitamin A, and zinc in male lung cancer cases and controlsNutrition and Cancer, 1989
- Dietary factors in the risk of bladder cancerNutrition and Cancer, 1989
- Diet, nutritional status, and cancer risk in american blacksNutrition and Cancer, 1989
- Dietary habits and lung cancer risk among Chinese females in Hong Kong who never smokedNutrition and Cancer, 1988
- Calcium and colon cancer: A reviewNutrition and Cancer, 1988
- Regression of experimental oral carcinomas by local injection of β‐carotene and canthaxanthinNutrition and Cancer, 1988
- Very low sister-chromatid exchange rate in Seventh-Day AdventistsMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1986
- Isoniazid overdose treated with high-dose pyridoxineAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 1983
- Nutrition and cancer: state of the art relationship of several nutrients to the development of cancer.Journal of the American College of Nutrition, 1982
- Effect of dietary sodium ascorbate on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine- or methylnitrosourea-induced colon carcinogenesis in ratsCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1982