Broccoli Sprouts Vs

Broccoli Sprouts vs. Bladder Cancer?

Study: Broccoli Sprout Extract Reduced Bladder Cancer in Lab Tests on Rats

By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Medical News

Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD

 

Feb. 28, 2008 — Natural chemicals in broccoli sprouts may curb bladder cancer.

That news comes from lab tests done on rats exposed to a chemical that causes bladder cancer.

 

Those rats were more resistant to bladder cancer if freeze-dried broccoli sprout extract had been added to their chow before, during, and after exposure to the bladder cancer carcinogen.

 

The credit may go to nutrients called isothiocyanates, especially one called sulforaphane, which the researchers call “a highly promising cancer chemopreventive agent.”

 

Sulforaphane is found in cruciferous vegetables, including broccoli and cauliflower, note the researchers, who made their own broccoli sprout extract for the study.

 

According to the researchers, the findings may explain why people who eat lots of fruits and vegetables — especially cruciferous vegetables — tend to have lower risk of bladder cancer.

 

The broccoli sprout extract didn’t hurt the rats’ bladder cells.

 

The rats that got the broccoli sprout extract gained less weight overall but wound up with heavier bladders than rats that didn’t get the broccoli sprout extract. Those weight changes were reversed by halting the broccoli sprout extract.

 

The study appears in the March 1 edition of Cancer Research

 

Related Article: Study: Broccoli Sprout Extract Reduced Bladder Cancer in Lab Tests on Rats