Guest guest Posted July 27, 2003 Report Share Posted July 27, 2003 Acrylamide Harms DNA Acrylamide Harms DNA-- But Jury Still Out on Danger of Common Food Chemical By Daniel DeNoon WebMD Medical News Reviewed By Brunilda Nazario, MD on Tuesday, June 17, 2003 June 17, 2003 -- Acrylamide -- a common cancer-causing chemical -- damages DNA, a new study shows. But just how dangerous is it? That's the million-dollar question -- but there's no final answer. A year after Swedish researchers first found high levels of acrylamide in common foods, its true danger remains unknown. Acrylamide is in treated water. It's in coffee and cosmetics and cigarette smoke. It abounds in potato chips and french fries. It mayeven be made by your own body. It causes cancer in lab mice -- and " probably " causes cancer in humans, the World Health Organization cautiously concludes. It also can cause brain and nerve damage. New lab studies reported in the June 18 issue of the Journal of the National Cancer Institute find that acrylamide -- at very low concentrations -- causes a wide range of genetic mutations. Ahmad Besaratinia, PhD, and Gerd P. Pfeifer, PhD, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, Calif., found that acrylamide doubled mutation rates in a special gene placed inside mouse cells. " The most significant thing we found was the mechanism by which acrylamide exerts its [cancer-causing] effect, " Besaratinia tells WebMD. " Most chemicals that cause cancer have these characteristics. They interact with the DNA molecule and bind to specific sites on cancer-related genes. " But Besaratinia warns that this model doesn't prove anything about humans. He's now looking at human cells to see whether acrylamide causes mutations in genes linked to cancer. Looking for a Needle in a Needlestack Margareta Törnqvist, PhD, University of Stockholm, Sweden, is a member of the scientific team that first found that high-heat cooking causes acrylamide to form in foods. In an editorial accompanying the Besaratinia and Pfeifer study, she and colleague Fredrik Granath, PhD, note that the average person has a blood level of acrylamide five times lower than the concentrations used in the study. " This study looked at a low dosage of acrylamide, but to show what is really going on you need to use really, really low doses, " Törnqvist tells WebMD. " They are not down in the doses we are exposed to through our diets. " Since nearly everybody is exposed to acrylamide, you'd think it would be easy to tell whether acrylamide in food causes cancer or brain damage. But that's just the problem. Since everybody is exposed to acrylamide, it's hard to compare exposed to non-exposed people. That's why the new study is important, Törnqvist says. More lab and animal experiments are needed to tease out the actual risk posed by acrylamide. Right now, her best guess is that 1% of lifetime cancer risk is due to acrylamide in the diet. " We have to live with it, " she says. " Of course, we should try to reduce our intake. And maybe we need to think of new ways to limit this risk. " Limits and Lunch Acrylamide is used to treat drinking water. The U.S. EPA says that a cup of water should contain no more than 0.12 micrograms of acrylamide. That's a lot less than you'd find in common foods. According to a June 2002 study by the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI): Three ounces of baked Ore Ida French Fries have 28 micrograms of acrylamide. One ounce of Cheerios has 7 micrograms. A large 6.2-ounce order of McDonald's French Fries has 82 micrograms. A jumbo 6.2-ounce order of KFC Potato Wedges has 52 micrograms. This month, CSPI urged the FDA to limit the amount of acrylamide in common foods. They suggested that since the amount that causes cancer is not known, the FDA should require foods to have no more acrylamide than is found in most other foods of the same kind. For example, most dry cereals have 71 parts per billion (ppb) of acrylamide. But Wheatena Toasted Wheat Cereal has 1,057 ppb of acrylamide. The CSPI says the manufacturer should be required to bring this down to at least 71 ppb until more is known about acrylamide risk. webmd.com/content/article/66/79891.htm -- SOURCES: Journal of the National Cancer Institute Journal, June 18, 2003. Ahmad Besaratinia, PhD, Beckman Research Institute, City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, Calif. Margareta Törnqvist, PhD, University of Stockholm, Sweden. Center for Science in the Public Interest news releases, June 4, 2003 and June 22, 2002. The complete " Whole Body " Health line consists of the " AIM GARDEN TRIO " Ask About Health Professional Support Series: AIM Barleygreen " Wisdom of the Past, Food of the Future " http://www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/AIM.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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