flaxseed inhibits tumor growth

From: Doug Skrecky (oberon@vcn.bc.ca)
Date: Thu Jun 25 1998 - 02:51:41 MDT


Authors
  Yan L. Yee JA. Li D. McGuire MH. Thompson LU.
Institution
  Department of Biomedical Sciences, Creighton University School of Medicine,
  Omaha, NE 68178-0405, USA. linyan:creighton.edu
Title
  Dietary flaxseed supplementation and experimental metastasis
  of melanoma cells in mice.
Source
  Cancer Letters. 124(2):181-6, 1998 Feb 27.
Abstract
  The present study investigated the effect of dietary supplementation of
  flaxseed, the richest source of lignans, on experimental
  metastasis of B16BL6 murine melanoma cells in C57BL/6 mice. Mice were fed a
  basal diet or the basal diet supplemented with 2.5, 5 or 10%
  flaxseed for 2 weeks before and after the intravenous
  injection of 0.75 x 10(5) melanoma cells. At necropsy, the number of tumors
  that developed in the lungs was counted, the cross-sectional area of tumors
  was measured and the volumes of tumors were calculated. The median number of
  tumors in mice fed the 2.5, 5 and 10% flaxseed-supplemented
  diets was 32, 54 and 63% lower than that of the controls, respectively. The
  addition of flaxseed to the diet also caused a
  dose-dependent decrease in the tumor cross-sectional area and the tumor
  volume. These results provide the first experimental evidence that
  flaxseed reduces metastasis and inhibits the growth of the
  metastatic secondary tumors in animals. It is concluded that
  flaxseed may be a useful nutritional adjuvant to prevent
  metastasis in cancer patients.



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