advertisement
 

Weekly Poll

A new study says that your relationship stands a better chance if you delay sex, do you agree?

I start relationships with sex, I can't delay I agree - I like romance and the anticipation I thought everybody knew this already I'd like to delay, but people aren't patient Don't agree. I need gratification and it's about me

General Newsletter

Sign up for our newsletter to get all the latest Health news

 
YOU ARE IN > News > Cancer

Curry compound kills cancer cells

Created: Thursday, October 29, 2009 Print
 

A molecule found in a curry ingredient can kill oesophageal cancer cells in the laboratory, suggesting it might be developed as an anti-cancer treatment, scientists said.

Researchers at the Cork Cancer Research Centre in Ireland treated oesophageal cancer cells with curcumin -- a chemical found in the spice turmeric, which gives curries a distinctive yellow colour -- and found it started to kill cancer cells within 24 hours.

The cells also began to digest themselves, they said in a study published in the British Journal of Cancer. Previous scientific studies have suggested curcumin can suppress tumours and that people who eat lots of curry may be less prone to the disease, although curcumin loses its anti-cancer attributes quickly when ingested.

But Sharon McKenna, lead author of the Irish study, said her study suggested a potential for scientists to develop curcumin as an anti-cancer drug to treat oesophageal cancer.

’Curcumin caused the cancer cells to die’
Cancers of the oesophagus kill more than 500 000 people across the world each year. The tumours are especially deadly, with five-year survival rates of just 12 to 31%.

McKenna said the study showed curcumin caused the cancer cells to die "using an unexpected system of cell messages."

Normally, faulty cells die by committing programmed suicide, or apoptosis, which occurs when proteins called caspases are 'switched on' in cells, the researchers said.

But these cells showed no evidence of suicide, and the addition of a molecule that inhibits caspases and stops this "switch being flicked' made no difference to the number of cells that died, suggesting curcumin attacked the cancer cells using an alternative cell signalling system.

US researchers said in 2007 they had found curcumin may help stimulate immune system cells in the Alzheimer's disease. – (Reuters Health, October 2009)

Read more:
Alcohol, cancer link

 

advertisement
 

 
 
 

Rate this article

Poor
Excellent
 
 
 
 
 
 

Today's top stories

 
 
 

Get a Quote

Looking for a medical scheme? Get a quote today

Blogs

People are blogging about Health

Forums

Find out what others are saying.