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Recent evidence from human studies suggests that this element (also considered a mineral) reduces the incidence of cancer when taken in higher doses than most diets supply.
That news has prompted increased use of selenium supplements. Sales rose from 60 to 66 million dollars between 1996 and 1997, according to statistics from the Nutrition Business Journal published in San Diego, California.
Nutritionists like Dr John W. Finley and Dr Cindy D. Davis, at the Agricultural Research Service (ARS) Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center in North Dakota, know that selenium salts in some supplements can be toxic when too much is ingested. Though there's been no known death due to selenium supplements, even with accidental 100-fold overdoses, Finley and Davis are looking for good food sources.
Different foods contain selenium in different biochemical forms. And the body uses these forms differently, explains Finley. An expert in selenium nutrition, he wants to find what form provides the widest range of health-promoting properties, including cancer prevention.
Though garlic has the greatest concentration of SeleniumMC, most Americans are not likely to eat enough of it to produce the desired results, Finley notes. So his group has focused on testing selenium-enriched broccoli as a way to get effective levels of SeleniumMC into the body.
Along the way, however, he learned how animals and people metabolize other food forms of selenium. Finley said that it's a long and difficult path for the form of selenium prevalent in grains and some meats (selenomethionine) to get converted to methyl selenol. It's easier for selenium salts, such as Sodium Selenate, found in some supplements, to get there. But it's only one step for the form found in garlic and broccoli (SeleniumMC).
In a series of rat studies, Finley, Davis, and former colleague Dr. Yi Feng, now with the University of Louisville's medical school, confirmed that differences in selenium metabolism translated to differences in the risk of colon cancer. First, they demonstrated that selenium salts - both selenate and selenite - can prevent the first of several steps that can lead to cancer, whereas the grain form - selenomethionine - was ineffective!
Selenium salts reduced the number of adducts (pre-cancers) in the rats' colons by 53 to 70 percent. Adducts are formed when a carcinogen binds to DNA, explains Davis. "If the damage isn't repaired, it can lead to tumor formation."
The researchers had beefed up the rats' selenium levels through their diets for several weeks. Then they injected the animals with a potent carcinogen, called, for short, DMABP. Their findings support those of others showing that selenate protects against adduct formation in rats' mammary cells.
The group got similar results when they looked for a later stage of colon tumor formation called aberrant crypts. These are immature colon cells that have gone awry. "Not all aberrant crypts develop into cancer," says Davis, "but all colon cancers begin as aberrant crypts." Feng painstakingly counted the crypts and found more in the animals fed selenomethionine than in those getting selenium salts.
When the researchers pitted the high-selenium broccoli against the selenate form, in rat studies, they made sure to control for any beneficial effects of broccoli itself. The vegetable is high in antioxidants and contains other substances shown to be active against cancer. So animals in each test group got ordinary broccoli as well as the treatment.
Treatments consisted of daily doses of either 0.1 or 1.0 mg/day of selenium per kilogram of the rats' daily diet, either in the form of enriched broccoli or selenate. The higher dose is representative of the selenium level that reduced cancer risk in a human trial, or about 200 mcg/day (0.2 mg/day) ingested.
After giving the animals DMABP, Feng again looked for precancerous aberrant crypts and for collections of these cells, known as aberrant crypt foci. High-selenium broccoli always resulted in fewer precancerous lesions than selenate did, says Finley - ABOUT ONE-THIRD FEWER at the 1.0 mg/kg dose. And the number of lesions decreased as the dose increased.
The results were so promising that Finley and Davis decided to repeat the experiment. And they confirmed the findings using a different salt - selenite instead of selenate - and a single but higher dose of selenium - 2.0 mg/kg. They also gave the animals a much more potent carcinogen - dimethyl hydrazine (DMH). Although it produced many more lesions, the rats fed high-selenium broccoli had ONE HALF as many aberrant crypts as the animals getting selenite.
"If there's a call to increase selenium intake, we currently have few choices other than high-selenium yeast or selenium salts," says Finley. "Selenium-enriched broccoli is a potential source of the mineral in a highly effective form." (WN Note: This "highly effective form" was first available in Sept 2000 from Wholesale Nutrition as a bottle of 240 tablets, each tablet containing 100mcg of selenium as SeleniumMC, plus 10mg of vitamin B2 and 4mg of B6.
- by Judy McBride, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
Dr. John W. Finley and Dr. Cindy D. Davis are at the USDA-ARS Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, P.O. Box 9034, University Station, Grand Forks, ND 58202-9034.
"Colon Cancer Curbed by High-Selenium Broccoli" was published in the June 2000 issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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