Search
Powered By HealthLine
Special Offers
Health Tools
 Food Guide
 Cooking Tools & Calculators
 Diet Reviews
 Eat Out Smart
 Healthy Cooking
Featured Conditions
 Diet & Exercise
 Food & Fitness
 High Blood Pressure
 Cholesterol
Resources
Healthscout News
3D Health Animations
Health Videos
Quizzes & Tools
Health Encyclopedia
Library & Communities
News Archive
Drug Library
Find a Therapist
Enter City or Zip Code:
Powered by Psychology Today



Channels
Home |  Today | Women| Men| Kids| Seniors| Diseases| Addictions| Sex & Relationships| Diet, Fitness, Looks| Alternative Medicine| Drug Checker
 Printer Friendly  Send to a Friend

Broccoli Compound May Help COPD Patients

Sulphoraphane boosts lungs' antioxidant activity, researchers explain

By Steven Reinberg
HealthDay Reporter


Related Encyclopedia
 border=
Abdominoplasty
Acidophilus
Acne
Adhesions
More...

Related Healthscout Videos
 border=
Nutrition and Cancer
Nutrition and Osteoporosis
Importance of Good Nutrition
Critical Nutrition
More...

Related Animations
 border=
Asthma
GERD
PPI Therapy
What is Cholesterol?
More...

Related Drug Information
 border=
Aciphex
Advair Diskus
Combivent
Flovent
More...

Related News Articles
 border=
Substitutions Make Holiday Fare Healthier
High Blood Pressure Stalks Many Americans
Health Tip: Signs of Celiac Disease in Children
Long-Term Erythromycin Cut COPD Complications
More...

FRIDAY, Sept. 12 (HealthDay News) -- People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) could one day benefit from an antioxidant compound in broccoli, researchers report.

COPD is the fourth-leading cause of death in the United States, affecting more than 16 million people, and is often the result of long-term smoking. There is no cure for this deadly disease, and current drugs do not slow its progression.

Text Continues Below



"In COPD, there is critical loss of antioxidant systems, which protect against oxidative stress and inflammation," explained lead researcher Shyam Biswal, an associate professor in the department of environmental health sciences and the division of pulmonary and critical care medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, in Baltimore.

"Even though there is a loss of this system, you can substantially restore it with an activator for this pathway," Biswal said. A compound in broccoli called sulforaphane has been shown effective in restoring antioxidant gene activity. "So this could be a new way of doing therapy," Biswal theorized.

The study is published Sept. 15 in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine.

One of the things that was not understood before this work was why COPD patients carry a lot of oxidative stress, Biswal said. "Now we know the defense system in the lungs is getting lost -- but there is a hope that you can turn it on," he said. "Now that we know the target, we have to develop a therapy and see how effective it is."

Biswal noted that the big problem in COPD is not repairing the damage done to the lungs but rather preventing bacterial infection. "Most COPD patients manifest infection in the lungs and they die from that," he said.

What the researchers found is that a gene called NRF2 (nuclear factor erythroid-derived 2-related factor 2) works as a master gene that turns on many antioxidant and pollutant-detoxifying genes that protect the lungs from environmental pollutants, such as cigarette smoke.

Page:  1 | 2 | Next >>

Copyright © 2008 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
Last updated 9/12/2008

Related Links
 border=
From Healthscout's partner site on diet & exercise, MyDietExercise.com
QUIZ: What's your ideal body weight?
QUIZ: Check your body mass index (BMI) online!
QUIZ: Rate your carbohydrate intake





SOURCES: Shyam Biswal, Ph.D., associate professor, department of environmental health sciences and the division of pulmonary and critical care medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore; Norman H. Edelman, M.D., professor, preventive medicine, internal medicine, physiology & biophysics, State University of New York, Stony Brook, N.Y.; Sept. 15, 2008, American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine


We comply with the HONcode standard for trustworthy health
information:
verify here.
About The HealthScout Network Contact Us
Copyright © 2001-2008. The HealthCentralNetwork, Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy  Terms of Service