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Effect of a vegan diet on biomarkers of chemoprevention in females
Verhagen, H.; Rauma, A. L.; Törrönen, R.; de Vogel, N.; Bruijntjes-Rozier, G. C.; Drevo, M. A.; Bogaards, J. J.; Mykkänen, H.
Abstract:
1. In order to study the potential beneficial effects of a vegan diet, a cross-sectional study was performed and several biomarkers of chemoprevention were measured in a population of female 'living food' eaters ('vegans'; n = 20) vs matched omnivorous controls (n = 20). 2. White blood cells obtained from fresh blood samples were subjected to the single-cell gel-electrophoresis assay. There was no statistically significant difference between the vegans and controls in the parameters 'tail length' and 'tail moment'. However, the 'tail moment' was significantly lower in a subset of the vegans (i.e.in those who did not use any vitamin and/or mineral supplements). 3. Fresh blood samples were exposed in vitro to the mutagen mitomycin C just prior to culturing. After culturing the number of binucleated lymphocytes with micronuclei was scored. There was no difference between the controls and vegans in the incidence of baseline micronuclei, nor in the number of mitomycin C-induced micronuclei. However, a significant correlation (r = -0.64, P
Automatic Tags
Female; Humans; Adult; Aging; Cross-Sectional Studies; Aged; Middle Aged; Diet, Vegetarian; DNA Damage; Cells, Cultured; Leukocytes; Superoxide Dismutase; Antibiotics, Antineoplastic; Chemoprevention; DNA, Single-Stranded; Electrophoresis; Erythrocytes; Glutathione Transferase; Micronuclei, Chromosome-Defective; Mitomycin
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