Want to reduce breast cancer risk? Eat walnuts

WASHINGTON, (Reuters) – By eating walnuts, women  could reduce their risk of breast cancer, researchers said yesterday.

Researchers at Marshall University School of Medicine in  Huntington, West Virginia, found that lab mice bred to develop  breast cancer had a significantly lower risk of breast cancer  if fed the human equivalent of a handful of walnuts a day.

“Walnuts are better than cookies, french fries or potato  chips when you need a snack,” Elaine Hardman, one of the  researchers working on the study, said in a statement.

“We know that a healthy diet overall prevents all manner of  chronic diseases,” she said.
Hardman said while the study was done with laboratory  animals, likely the same mechanism would be at work in people.

“Walnuts contain multiple ingredients that, individually,  have been shown to slow cancer growth including omega-3 fatty  acids, antioxidants and phytosterols,” Hardman’s team wrote in  a summary presented at the American Association for Cancer  Research’s annual meeting in Denver.

The researchers used specially bred mice that normally  always develop breast cancer. Half got the human equivalent of  two ounces of walnuts per day and half got a normal diet.

The mice eating the walnuts had fewer and smaller breast  tumors and those that did get them got them later than the  other mice.

“These laboratory mice typically have 100 percent tumor  incidence at five months; walnut consumption delayed those  tumors by at least three weeks,” Hardman said in a statement.
“It is clear that walnuts contribute to a healthy diet that  can reduce breast cancer.”

The study adds to evidence that omega-3 fatty acids can  provide a range of health benefits, from preventing heart  disease to lowering cancer risks.

Scientists have been unsure whether the types found in nuts  and leafy green vegetables work as well as the omega-3 fatty  acids found in fish oil.