Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Eat Mushrooms Low Breast Cancer Risk

Many of mushrooms have cultivated and eaten in tropical and subtropical country like in Indonesia. The mushroom benefit believes can lower the risk of women on getting breast cancer. Women who get plenty of mushrooms and green tea in their diets may have a lower risk of developing breast cancer, new study findings suggest.

The study, of more than 2,000 Chinese women, found that the more fresh and dried mushrooms the women ate, the lower was their breast cancer risk. The risk was lower still among those who also drank green tea every day. The effect of green tea against of cancer growing have proven to lessen the cancer risk like on my article on The Benefit of Green Tea.

It's known that the rate of breast cancer in China is four- to five- times lower than rates typically seen in developed countries — though the rate has been climbing over the past few decades in the most affluent parts of China.

The current findings suggest that traditional diets — and specifically, large quantities of mushrooms and green tea — may help explain China's lower breast cancer incidence, according to lead researcher Dr. Min Zhang, of the University of Western Australia in Perth. She and her colleagues report the findings in the International Journal of Cancer.

The study was conducted in southeast China and involved 1,009 breast cancer patients between the ages of 20 and 87, and an equal number of healthy women the same age. All completed a detailed dietary questionnaire that asked them how often they ate specific foods.

Meanwhile, women who ate 4 grams or more of dried mushrooms per day had half the cancer risk of non-consumers. Finally, mushroom eaters who also drank green tea everyday had only 11 to 18 percent of the breast cancer risk of women who consumed neither.

The study does not prove cause-and-effect, the researchers point out. They did account for several kinds of risk factors for breast cancer — such as the women's weight, education level, and exercise frequency and smoking habits — but there could be other factors that explain the findings.

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