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Don't want toxins in food? Then eating could be tricky
By
Sarah Solovitch, Special to The Times
Toxicologists
are quick to point out that raw, natural foods — just like
processed ones — are themselves complex chemical mixtures.
Start analyzing them and you'll find tens of thousands of chemical
compounds, not all of them good for you.
"What
protects us is that these chemicals are present at very, very
low levels, and we have defense mechanisms in place," says
Michael Pariza, a food toxicologist and microbiologist at the
University of Wisconsin.
The
best-known research in the field comes out of UC Berkeley, where
Lois Swirsky Gold has been studying naturally occurring pesticides
and synthetic chemicals in foods for the last 25 years.
She
points out that hundreds of plant chemicals have been found to
cause cancer in rats or mice when given in extremely high doses.
"A
healthy diet contains rodent carcinogens galore," says Gold,
director of the Carcinogenic Potency Project at Berkeley. "Ninety-nine
percent of the chemicals that people take in are natural."
A
partial list of foods with naturally occurring, but toxic chemicals
includes apple, apricots, bananas, basil, beets, broccoli, coffee,
cantaloupes, tomatoes, mustard, cardamom, carrots and lettuce.
They include chemicals such as benzyl acetate, caffeic acid, coumarin,
quercetin, and respertine — all produced by plants to defend
themselves against fungi, insects and other predators.
In
addition, many more chemicals are formed during cooking. For example,
more than 1,000 chemicals have been identified in roasted coffee,
many of which are produced through roasting. Acrylamide is one
of those.
Humans
have natural defenses that protect against these chemicals, both
natural and synthetic. The point, says Gold, is that it's impossible
to avoid them; a better focus is spent on the known causes of
human cancer: obesity, excessive alcohol consumption, smoking,
hormones, viruses and infectious agents such as hepatitis B and
hepatitis C.
Gold's
research has led her to estimate that Americans consume 1.5 grams
(or 1,500 milligrams) of these natural pesticides a day —
about 10,000 times more than they absorb in synthetic pesticide
residue.
Of
the 72 natural pesticides tested in high-dose cancer tests, which
identify the level at which animals get sick, 38 have proven carcinogenic.
Acrylamide is only one of many natural chemicals in the diet that
cause cancer in high doses in rats.
"No
diet can be free of rodent carcinogens," Gold says. "You
would think the way we regulate, it would be the opposite. But
nature is not benign."
Source:
http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=community&id=3686429
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