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  #16   ^
Old Fri, Apr-26-02, 12:18
tamarian's Avatar
tamarian tamarian is offline
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Yep, read all about it here, in the Research/Media watch forum:

http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthre...&threadid=41576

Wa'il
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  #17   ^
Old Fri, Apr-26-02, 12:22
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ancelse ancelse is offline
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Arrow Study Links High-Carbs to Cancer

Quote:
Originally posted by pegm
Has anyone seen the details of this study?
Study Links High-Carbs to Cancer
By Kim Gamel
© The Associated Press

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) - Potato chips, french fries and other high-carbohydrate foods contain a substance that may cause cancer, according to a study released Wednesday by Swedish food authorities.

The substance, called acrylamide, forms in varying levels when carbohydrates are heated in a certain way, such as by frying potatoes or baking bread, researchers said.

"The discovery that acrylamide is formed during the preparation of food ... is new knowledge," Leif Busk, chief researcher at the National Food Administration, told a news conference. "It may now be possible to explain some of the cases of cancer caused by food."

The governmental agency, following up on research by a group of scientists at Stockholm University, studied more than 100 foods bought in Swedish stores and restaurants and determined that "fried, oven-baked and deep-fried potato and cereal products may contain high levels of acrylamide."

The agent has been classified as a "probable human carcinogen," in food, but experts not involved with the study cautioned that no link to cancer had been confirmed.

Officials with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration did not immediately comment, but food scientists in the United States urged consumers to be patient and not overreact to the Swedish study.

"I think we need to step back a little bit and wait for greater discussion of the issue and see the findings presented in more detail," said Carl Winter, a toxicologist at the University of California at Davis. "The most important thing is not the presence or absence of any type of ingredient, but how much is there."

Winter pointed out that it was unusual for such results to be released before publication in a scientific journal and said more investigation was needed.

"I would caution consumers to be a little patient here," he said. "Cancer's a very scary word, but one has to understand how these tests are done."

The Swedish agency said the findings have been submitted to unspecified international researchers and to the 15-nation European Union for consideration, but they felt the information was important enough to release now.

"I am quite sure that this is a problem everywhere and we need to do something about it," Busk said.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency describes acrylamide as white, odorless, flake-like crystals that are used mainly in treating drinking water and for industrial purposes and can cause cancer in people exposed to high levels for a long period.

Mary Ellen Camire, a food scientist and nutritionist at the University of Maine, was skeptical about any link to cancer and said it was important to remember that whole-grain bread and potatoes contain a lot of important nutrients.

"The risk-to-benefit ratio is hard to estimate," she said. "We eat a lot of strange chemicals, but that's life. You just have to get a balance."

Busk estimated that acrylamide could be responsible for several hundred of the 45,000 cancer cases in Sweden each year, based on experiments in which rats were fed fried food, but he declined to be more specific about the possible cancer risk.

The Swedish agency did not issue new guidelines on what or how to eat, although researchers pointed out that it's always more healthy to avoid fried foods.

"Do not stop eating these foods, but beware of what you eat, eat more cooked food, more vegetables," said Lilianne Abramsson Zetterberg, a toxicologist with the government agency.
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  #18   ^
Old Fri, Apr-26-02, 20:50
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tamarian tamarian is offline
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Default WHO announces urgent meeting on new food cancer scare

WHO announces urgent meeting on new food cancer scare
Fri Apr 26,12:15 PM ET

GENEVA - The World Health Organization (news - web sites ) said Friday that it plans to hold an urgent expert meeting in the coming weeks to assess the health risk from a cancer-causing substance which Swedish scientists discovered in high quantities in potato products and other high carbohydrate foods.

The study, released Wednesday, found that the substance known as acrylamide forms in varying levels when carbohydrates are heated in a certain way, such as by frying potatoes or baking bread. Researchers said the discovery could offer a clue about food-related cancers.

"Previous concerns about acrylamide were a result of known human exposure through drinking water and in certain occupations. The Swedish announcement is the first report of the presence of elevated levels of acrylamide in food," said WHO in a statement.

The U.N. health agency said it hoped to hold expert consultations before the end of June to "fill in relevant gaps in knowledge." Although much is known about acrylamide and its effects in animals, there is far less information about its effects on humans.

Among the questions to be resolved is whether acrylamide can be taken up from food as readily as it is from water and how harmful this is, WHO said.

WHO said the Swedish findings did not change basic dietary advice to eat less fat and more fruit and vegetables.

The Swedish scientists studied more than 100 foods bought in stores and restaurants and determined that "fried, oven-baked and deep-fried potato and cereal products may contain high levels of acrylamide."

In 1994, WHO's International Agency for Research on Cancer evaluated acrylamide as "probably carcinogenic to humans," based on its effects on experimental animals.

"The few epidemiological studies of acrylamide that were available at that time were inadequate to establish that occupational exposures to acrylamide had increased cancer risks in exposed workers," it said.


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm..._cancer_foods_1
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  #19   ^
Old Fri, Apr-26-02, 20:51
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tamarian tamarian is offline
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Default U.N. food body urges more research of cancer study

U.N. food body urges more research of cancer study
Fri Apr 26, 2:05 PM ET

ROME (Reuters) - The United Nations (news - web sites ) food body said on Friday it was too early to reach any conclusions from findings by Swedish scientists that carbohydrate-rich foods contain a likely cancer-causing substance.

The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) urged further international research of the findings which indicate acrylamide, well known as a likely cancer-causing agent, is formed when rice, potatoes and cereals are fried or baked.

"The information available does not allow us to draw conclusions or to make recommendations for consumers or food manufacturers," Manfred Luetzow, FAO's food chemicals expert, said in a statement.

FAO said it had requested access to the details of the "unexpected finding" and welcomed Sweden's proposal for further studies in co-operation with international organisations.

FAO said that while the toxicological effects of acrylamide are well known, Swedish authorities need to explain how and why it is formed when these foods are fried or baked.

Research carried out at Stockholm University with the government food safety agency and released this week showed that potato crisps, French fries, biscuits and bread contain alarmingly high amounts of acrylamide.

The results of the research were deemed so important and surprising that the scientists took the unusual step of going public with their findings before publishing them in an academic journal and having them reviewed by peers.

A top World Health Organisation official told Reuters on Thursday that the findings were worrying but that more research was needed.

FAO's general recommendations for a well-balanced and diverse diet prepared in ways that preserve nutrient content would not need to be changed as a result of the findings, Luetzow added.


http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...m/india_70465_1
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  #20   ^
Old Fri, Apr-26-02, 20:52
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tamarian tamarian is offline
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Plan: Atkins/PP/BFL
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I guess I was wrong!? The United Nations and Worl Health Organization are paying attention....

Wa'il
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  #21   ^
Old Sat, Apr-27-02, 21:29
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bullseye bullseye is offline
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Default carcinogens in food

Hi everyone,
I found the debate on this forum about whether acrylamide was a carcinogen, or not, interesting. I don't suppose it really matters to us as LCarbers as we are already heavily reducing the intake from this group of foods anyway - aren't we?????
What concerns me more is the potential harm that steriods and hormones could be doing, as these are injected into just about all the meat we eat (organic excepted). As we know, these substances are mostly artificially produced. No one knows what damage these could do either, in the long run.
I guess our parents were right, we just have to exercise a bit of common sense and eat (and drink) in moderation.

whadaya reckon?

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  #22   ^
Old Mon, Jun-10-02, 12:39
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Kent Kent is offline
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Norway Study Backs Risks of Cancer in Chips
Thu Jun 6,10:47 AM ET

OSLO (Reuters) - Norwegian scientists said on Thursday they had confirmed Swedish research indicating that fried and baked foods contained a cancer-causing substance and urged big eaters to cut back.


The Norwegian Food Control Authority said its study indicated that high levels of acrylamide in fried and baked foods caused 30 cases of cancer a year among Norway's 4.5 million population.

A similar Swedish study last month also found that potato chips, french fries, biscuits and bread contained alarmingly high amounts of acrylamide, an agent formed in high concentrations when carbohydrate-rich foods are fried or baked.

The Norwegian authority said its study broadly found the same results as the Swedes and a subsequent British study. The Swedish researchers found the results so shocking that they published before other scientists had time to review the survey.

"Until further notice, the Norwegian Food Control Authority recommends people to eat a varied diet and not to fry food too hard," it said in a statement. "Big consumers should however reduce their consumption if they...want to be on the safe side."

But it said that bread, which had the lowest concentrations of acrylamide in the survey of 30 types of food, was safe. Bread is still a major source of the agent since most people eat far more bread than crisps.

"The positive effects of eating bread are much greater than the risk from acrylamide found in bread," it said.

Norway Study Backs Risks of Cancer in Chips
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