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Originally published September 30 2008

Lignans Shown to Provide Great Benefits for Breast Health

by Barbara L. Minton

(NaturalNews) Most women who worry about the health of their breasts have a yearly mammogram and hope for the best. That's about all they can do since the traditional medical model offers nothing in the way of preemptive strategy. And it's readily apparent that mammograms were designed to recruit patients into the lucrative cancer treatment machine, not to actually help women. After all, as many of us learned when we were kids, radiation causes cancer. On the other hand, the world of natural health offers tremendous evidence that there are many ways to prevent and cure breast cancer. One of the best ways is to make sure that your levels of lignans are high.

Human lignans are created when natural plant compounds locked into the cellular matrix of certain seeds, beans, legumes, fruits and vegetables are acted upon by bacteria in the digestive tract. These compounds resemble the shape and structure of estrogen and have some of estrogen's functionality. Due to their resemblance to estrogen, lignans are able to compete with estrogen for estrogen receptor sites on breast tissue. When lignans block these receptor sites they reduce the amount of estrogen that can be received in the breast tissue.

Studies have shown that women with the highest levels of lignans in their breasts have the highest levels of breast health. Secoisolariciresinol (SDG) is the natural lignan found in high levels in flaxseed. Studies have shown that when these lignans are present in high amounts in the blood and urine, women have a reduced risk of many chronic diseases including breast cancer and cardiovascular disease.

Flaxseed and its primary lignan SDG have a variety of effects on estrogen metabolism and receptors. When transformed into mammalian lignans by the action of intestinal bacteria they become known as phytoestrogens. The effects of this transformation are readily seen from research findings.

Research findings document the benefits of lignans for breast health

Human-derived breast cancer cells were kept in culture and incubated with mammalian lignans plus estradiol, the most aggressive form of estrogen. Estradiol and the mammalian lignans each stimulated the proliferation of cells, but when combined, no stimulation was seen. The results of the study indicate that mammalian lignans prevent or reduce the binding/metabolism of estradiol within these cells.

Lignans were shown to stimulate the production of sex hormone binding globulin. This globulin, produced in the liver, tightly binds estrogen and reduces the amount of free estrogen circulating in the body that is able to enter tissue. This action effectively reduces the stimulatory effect of estrogen on tissue growth.

In postmenopausal women estrogen is produced through a process called aromatase, the conversion of other hormones to estrogen. When incubated with mammalian lignans, aromatase is inhibited. This action is similar to that of the aromatase inhibiting drugs such as Arimidex and Femara, often prescribed for women who have had breast cancer and want to prevent a recurrence. However, these drugs have horrible side effects.

The highest phytoestrogen consumption and concentrations in biological fluids are seen in countries where cancer incidence is low. The lowest concentrations were found in breast cancer patients or in women at high risk for breast cancer. These findings led researchers to investigate the effects of the SDG found in flax and mammalian lignans for its protective effects in animals. The animals were given a flaxseed supplement along with a carcinogen and a high fat diet. The result was a highly significant reduction in size and number of breast tumors.

A component in the spread (metastasis) of cancer is the ability of tumors to manufacture new blood vessels for themselves from pre-existing blood vessels in a process known as angiogenesis. Animals implanted with a human-derived breast cancer cell line displayed potent metastatic activity. When supplemented with flaxseed meal, they showed significant reduction in tumor growth rate and metastasis. However, the specific protective components of the flaxseeds were not discernible from these two studies.

Two studies attempted to ascertain the most preventive component in flaxseed. In the first, animals were given a breast cancer-causing chemical for 13 weeks, then supplemented with either flaxseed oil containing only trace amounts of SDG, flaxseed meal, or pure SDG. All three supplements reduced tumor size, but only the animals supplemented with pure SDG showed a reduction in both tumor size and the average number of new tumors formed.

In the second study, pure SDG extracted from flaxseed and fed to carcinogen induced animals resulted in a 46% lower number of tumors compared to those not receiving SDG.

In human studies, researchers directly examined the influence of flaxseed and its lignans on breast health in postmenopausal women by expressing the relationship of dietary and urinary lignan concentrations. They used women in Eastern Finland where dietary lignan intake is typically above that of women in the U.S. They found that higher blood concentrations of SDG were linked to a highly significant reduction in breast cancer risk.

Twenty-eight healthy postmenopausal women were studied to determine if flaxseed supplementation altered the metabolism of estrogens. They completed a series of 7 week supplementation periods where they ate their usual diet, took a 5 gram/day supplement of flaxseed meal, or took a 10 gram/day supplement of flaxseed meal. During the periods when the women consumed the flaxseed supplements the concentration of properly metabolized estrogen in the urine increased, with 10 gram/day producing the greatest increase. Additionally, the ratio of properly metabolized estrogen to improperly metabolized estrogen increased with flaxseed, with the 10 gram/day dose eliciting an increase significantly greater than the 5 gram/day dose.

These researchers also evaluated the effects of flaxseed and wheat bran fiber supplementation on estrogen metabolism in 16 healthy premenopausal women for a period of 8 menstrual cycles. The women ate their usual diet and specially prepared baked goods containing either 10 grams ground flaxseed, 28 grams wheat bran fiber, 10 grams ground flaxseed plus 28 grams wheat bran fiber, or no added lignan or fiber source for two consecutive cycles. Only the two treatments where flaxseed baked goods were consumed produced significant alterations in urinary markers of estrogen metabolism. Both resulted in significant increases in proper estrogen metabolism, and the ratio of proper to improper metabolism. Because the flaxseed used in this experiment was low in omega-3 fatty acid and in fiber relative to the wheat bran, the findings reinforce the assertion that SDG is the primary estrogen metabolism modifier present in flaxseed.

Other research compared the effects of flaxseed and soy upon estrogen metabolism. Postmenopausal women received a placebo muffin, a muffin with 25 grams of ground flaxseed, or a muffin with 25 grams of soy daily for 16 weeks. At the end of this period, only the group receiving the flaxseed muffin showed significant increases in good estrogen metabolism and metabolic ratio.

Research also suggests that breast tenderness and pain, known as cyclical mastalgia, may carry an elevated risk of breast cancer. 116 women who had experienced severe cyclical mastalgia for the preceding 6 months were supplemented with flaxseed (25 grams/muffin) or placebo muffins over 3 menstrual cycles. At completion the reduction in breast pain, swelling and lumpiness was significantly lower in the women eating the flaxseed muffin. These women showed an increase in urinary mammalian lignans and a change in circulating estrogen level.

In still another investigation, 39 women newly diagnosed with cancerous breast tumors consumed a muffin containing 25 grams of ground flaxseed meal, or a placebo muffin during the time period following their diagnosis until their surgery. At both points analyses were performed to assess the rate of tumor cell proliferation. In the flaxseed muffin group, factors indicative of tumor growth fell by 21-33%. These women also showed a significant increase in urinary lignans.

These findings are similar to those seen in women with breast cancer receiving tamoxifen under similar conditions. Flaxseed SDG exerts actions like those of tamoxifen without the side effects. They are nature's selective estrogen receptor modulators. Flaxseed lignans are chemically similar to tamoxifen, but because they occur in nature they are easily identified and used by the body. And because they are naturally occurring, the body does not build resistance to them as it does to foreign substances like tamoxifen. Women taking tamoxifen build resistance to the drug and it becomes ineffectual after five years, leaving them vulnerable.

How to make sure you get enough lignans

In order for lignans to effectively compete with estrogen for the estrogen receptor sites, there must be a large number of lignans in the body. This can be accomplished by consistently eating a diet high in lignan precursors including flax seeds or other high lignan producing foods such as garlic, carrots, broccoli, asparagus, and dried apricots and prunes. It can also be accomplished by using high lignan flax oil. High lignan flax oil works well bonded with organic low fat cottage cheese, as the Budwig protocol for cancer prevention and cure has documented.

There are also a number of high lignan SDG products formulated as capsules, the best known of which is Brevail made by the Barleans Company. Barleans also makes top quality organic high lignan flax oil as does Spectrum. These are available at health food stores or from online retailers.

Lignans pass through the body in a 24 to 48 hour period, so care must be taken to eat foods containing lignan precursors on a daily basis. Supplementing with high lignan flax oil or a lignan capsule formulation insures that you will get a quantifiable amount everyday.

Since lignans are created by the action of intestinal bacteria upon the lignan precursors found in certain vegetables and fruits, supplementing with probiotics is a good idea for keeping your intestinal tract well populated with these friendly bacteria. It is crucial to do so following use of antibiotics.

Unlike the diet of our ancestors, today's western diet does not include much in the way of high lignan foods. Add to that the fact that we are not generally as active as our ancestors and hopefully eat less. So the amount of lignans available to us from our food is small. Much of this research suggests that this decreased intake of foods containing lignan precursors has left women without the ability to modulate estrogen naturally.

Reference:

Results from these studies may be viewed in detail at (www.brevail.com)

About the author

Barbara is a school psychologist, a published author in the area of personal finance, a breast cancer survivor using "alternative" treatments, a born existentialist, and a student of nature and all things natural.





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