Advertisement
Fabulous fibre
No pill can do what dietary fibre does for us - here's why you should eat it.
Zim: free coffins
The Zim government is offering free coffins and graves to cholera victims.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND
 
DO THIS:TEST YOURSELFGREAT GUIDESQUIZ YOURSELF
 Medical
Common herbs may raise cancer risk

Some commonly used herbal treatments may further increase the risk of breast and uterine cancer for women already predisposed to those diseases.

That's the suggestion of a new animal study presented at the annual meeting of the American Association for Cancer Research in San Francisco. Researchers from the University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute offer new evidence that herbs such as red clover and motherwort - traditionally used for gynaecological complaints - as well as saw palmetto and rhodiola rosea root can have such a strong estrogenic effect they could increase the risk of oestrogen-related cancers.

 
Advertisement
Herbs show oestrogen activity
"Despite the fact that these are plants, we demonstrated considerable estrogenic activity - including the ability to bind to oestrogen receptors" in much the same way as natural oestrogen or oestrogen replacement does, says study author Patricia Eagon, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Pittsburgh.

In addition, Eagon found that extracts of maca root, cramp bark and turmeric root also exhibited modest oestrogenic activity.

While all the plants can successfully be used to ease a wide variety of symptoms, particularly those associated with menopause and the corresponding drop in natural oestrogen levels, Eagon says women who want to limit oestrogen exposure should think twice before using these herbs.

"The activity is there, so if you are avoiding oestrogen for any reason, you should probably not use these herbs," Eagon says. This is especially true for women at risk for oestrogen-sensitive cancers, particularly in the breast and the uterus.

An important caution
For alternative medicine expert Dr James Dillard, the findings are an important caution. He adds, though, that they should be viewed in the proper perspective.

"First, what holds true for rats doesn't always true for humans, so you can't make that automatic leap from an animal study to human application," says Dillard, clinical medical advisor at the Rosenthal Centre of Alternative and Complementary Medicine at Columbia University.

That said, he also suggests women should err on the side of caution and approach the use of these herbs judiciously, particularly if they are at risk for any oestrogen-related cancers.

"If a woman is avoiding hormone replacement therapy because she is concerned about exposure to oestrogen, then she should also avoid these herbs - at least until we can confirm or refute these findings in human studies," Dillard says.

Women at risk should avoid these herbs
The study was an animal experiment using rats that had their ovaries surgically removed. This, Eagon says, automatically deprived the rats of their natural oestrogen supply.

However, when these same rats were exposed to the various herbs in the study, Eagon reports, researchers could again document measurable levels of oestrogenic activity. Specifically, the oestrogen in the plants was able to bind to oestrogen receptors in the rats, acting much like a true hormone.

In one respect, the findings show these oestrogenic botanicals may have strong clinical applications, such as the ability to reduce some menopause-related symptoms. However, "it might be wise to avoid these herbs in conditions where oestrogen is contraindicated," Eagon says.

This would include women with a strong family history of breast or uterine cancer, or those who may have already had one or more bouts with either disease, she says.

Previous studies confirm result
In previous studies, also conducted by Eagon, other herbs traditionally used for gynaecological complaints and menopause symptoms also demonstrated strong oestrogenic activity. The herbs included dang qui root, black and blue cohosh, vitex berry, hops flower, wild yam and licorice root.

"All were shown to interact with the oestrogen receptors in the lab, and to induce oestrogenic responses in rats who had their ovaries removed," Eagon says.

For Dillard, both the old and new data imply that women who have a known oestrogen receptive positive tumour should definitely not use these herbs.

HealthScout


 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent
 JOBS
Senior Secretary
Gauteng - North/Sandton
Infrastructure Resource
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Management Accountant
R450,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Financial Manager
R350,000-400,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Financial and Project Accountant
R300,000-360,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Financial Accountant
R380,000-420,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
SSIS Business Intelligence Specialists (SSIS; SSAS)
R350,000-500,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - North/Sandton
Financial Accountant
R350,000-450,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - South

 
Previous article: Next article:
Cervical cancer screening Diarrhoea - running for your life?
Sign up
 *Daily tip
 Newsletter
 Special offers
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!
 OTHER ARTICLES
Did Wuornos have Borderline Personality Disorder?
Aspirin may reduce cancer risk
Middle-aged and acne-ridden?
Babies shaped human breast
Benefits beyond birth control
What is making you sneeze?
Breast cancer - the facts
Cervical cancer screening more accurate
Common herbs may raise cancer risk
Diarrhoea - running for your life?
Does your breath blow others away?
Doped up rats, like, failed the tests
Doubts about douching
Hair today - gone tomorrow?
Hairdressers have smaller babies
Hay fever - seasons sneezing in the sun
Healthy things to do daily
Hope for the healing
Hormone therapy helps memory
Hormone therapy preventing heart disease?
Hormones to smile about
How healthy are your parents?
Insulin resistance - first shadow of diabetes
Losing your mind over headaches?
Migraine blues
Mouth ulcers can be quite a mouthful
Obese girls run the risk of asthma
Once bitten, twice shy?
Osteoporosis: the brittle facts
Psoriasis getting under your skin?
Fascinating facts about the skin
Smart pads do it all for you
Soapies making you sick?
10 things not to do today
Stocking up - You and varicose veins
The lowdown on kidney stones
This is your back speaking
Urinary tract infection
What your body's telling you
What you can do now to cut breast cancer risk
Women and pregnancy in SA
Women ignore heart attack signs
Women: weak in the knees?
Your medicine chest
Too busy for a break? Making time for yourself
Will a nose job change my life?
Big, bigger, bosoms
Pregnant? So what are the options?
Collagen: A new fountain of youth?
Hormone Therapy: The latest
FDA rules against silicone
Decoding breast cancer
Pelvic floor rehabilitation
Is this the right pharmacy for you?
Hit that hangover
Summer has a sting in its tail
The Pill: heart positive or heart negative?
Are you a hypochondriac?
Women, stroke and heart disease
Best feet forward
Recognising kidney trouble
Women - prevent bad health now!
No-pain dentistry on the way
Life is a gut reaction
Just 'winter blues', or real depression?
A ray of hope in the battle against psoriasis
Medical costs bleeding you dry?
The price of being a woman
17 symptoms no one should ignore
The medical milestones of the millennium
Aids transforms the face of hospice
Moms-to-be: diet and air alert
Save your liver from Hepatitis B

Fascinating facts
The menstrual cycle corresponds to the 28-day cycle of the moon. Menses is the Latin word for months, hence the word.

 

 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement