Saturated Fat Linked to CancerAp
which included information on meat and fat intake, after which the participants were tracked by the NIH-AARP study either up till 2003, until they were diagnosed with cancer, or until they passed on. The median follow-up period of the study was 7.5 years...
Looks at the work of researchers with the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Maryland and the Missouri Department of Health dealing with an analysis of lung-cancer risks in non-smokers. Findings which reinforce concerns about dietary fat and highlight several new risks; Study by Michael C.R...
Those who got 5% more of their daily calories from saturated fat and 5% less from carbohydrate were 1.8 times more likely to die of any cause The same men were 2.8 times more likely to die of prostate cancer Men who got 10% more of their daily calories from vegetable fat and 10% less...
Kesteloot H, Lesaffre E & Joossens JV (1991) Dairy fat, saturated animal fat, and cancer risk. Preventative Medicine 20, 226± 236.Kesteloot H, Lesaffre E, Joossens JV. Dairy fat, saturated animal fat, and cancer risk. Preventive Medicine 1991; 20: 226 - 36....
Saturated fat and lung cancerTerr LC.L C TerrPsychoanalytic Study of the Child
“European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition”. It’s one of the largest human cancer studies ever undertaken, so we believe the results are meaningful. Many previous human studies, as well animal studies, show that total fat and especially saturated fat, increase breast cancer ...
The effect of saturated fat was more pronounced for adenocarcinoma than for other cell types. Weekly servings of beans and peas were significantly related to decreased lung cancer risk, while citrus fruit and juice showed a twofold increase in risk; this trend was also significant. Conclusion: By...
Eating a diet higher in saturated fat, a type of fat found commonly in foods such as fatty beef and cheese, was linked to more aggressive prostate cancer, a study by University of North Carolina Lineberger Comprehensive Cancer Center researchers and coll
the belief that it is doing them good. But is fat, specifically saturated fat, the real criminal here or have we been somewhat misguided by company-funded research, fat-phobic conventional medical wisdom and the advertising prowess of a concept that now encompasses a multi-million dollar ...