Anti-Cancer Diet Beaverton OR

Cancer-fighting agents in fruits and vegetables work in a variety of ways, and they work together synergistically in ways that we're only beginning to understand.

Foundation Natural Medicine Center
503-608-9160
3800 Southwest Cedar Hills Boulevard, Suite 200-D
Beaverton, OR
Providence Medical Group
503-216-0700
18040 SW Lower Boones Ferry Road, Suite 100
Tigard, OR
Robert George Martindale, MD
3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd
Portland, OR
William Brewster Smith, MD
503-229-7246
1040 NW 22nd Ave Ste 400
Portland, OR
Integrative Primary Care Associates
503-227-0350
2050 Northwest Lovejoy Street, #1
Portland, OR
Bruce Mc Laren Wolfe, MD
800-282-3284
2338 NW Jessamine Way
Portland, OR
Glenn Thomas Gerhard, MD
503-494-9000
3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd
Portland, OR
Claudia Sage
(503) 699-2955
16463 Boones Ferry
Lake Oswego, OR
Kay Fields
(503) 295-7600
1962 NW Kearney
Portland, OR
Jeff Clark
(503) 691-0901
8555 SW Tualatin Rd
Tualatin, OR
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The Anti-Cancer Diet:

By Peter Jaret

It wasn’t until my annual physical examination, and a simple question from the doctor about my family health history, that I found myself thinking, Uh-oh.

Fourteen years ago my mother died of lung cancer. Ten years later my aunt died of the same disease. Not long ago my brother was diagnosed with lymphoma. Of course I’d known all that. But somehow I hadn’t consciously admitted to myself how often cancer had struck. Brain tumors, skin cancer, prostate cancer—they all showed up somewhere in the family tree. Were we especially susceptible to this terrible disease? And was there anything to do to lower the risk?

Risk for some cancers, in fact, does run in families. Some inherited genes seem to make it easier for healthy cells to mutate into malignancy; others can impair the body’s built-in ability to disable cancer-causing substances before they cause trouble. Inherited risk helps explain why some smokers live until they’re 95 and others, like my mother and her sister, die of lung cancer in their sixties. Someday, genetic tests may be used routinely to assess a person’s risk of specific cancers. But I don’t want to wait for that. I want to do whatever I can to lower my risk. Now.

So I called Melanie Polk, a dietitian and director of nutrition education at the American Institute for Cancer Research, and she told me the same thing I would hear from almost every expert, alternative or mainstream, including the National Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society. “Eat more fruits and vegetables. That’s the single most important step most people can take to lower their cancer risk.”

After decades of waging war against cancer, was that the best researchers could offer? Steer your cart to the produce aisle?

“Absolutely,” says John Weisburger, a physician and expert on diet and health at the American Health Foundation/Institute for Cancer Prevention. “It’s hardly news that fruits and vegetables—really, almost any foods that come from plants—are good for health. The real surprise has been discovering just how much protection they contain.” Indeed, foods from plants are turning out to be rich in hundreds, even thousands of newly identified substances that work in many different ways to lower cancer danger. Some boost levels of enzymes in the body that neutralize cancer-causing substances. Some protect cell walls, so carcinogens can’t get in and cause damage. Antioxidants in foods can prevent damage from free radicals that might otherwise disrupt DNA, setting in motion genetic changes that could lead to cancer. Researchers have even discovered substances in food that trigger damaged cells to self-destruct, preventing tumors from forming.

“Cancer-fighting agents in fruits and vegetables work in a variety of ways, and they work together synergistically in ways that we’re only beginning to understand,” says Arthur D. Heller, an internist, gastroenterologist, and clinical nutrition specialist at New York City’s Weill Cornell Medi...

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