U.S. Produce & Pesticides.: New study... - Advanced Prostate...

Advanced Prostate Cancer

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U.S. Produce & Pesticides.

pjoshea13 profile image
12 Replies

New study. Of particular concern to those who have adopted a plant-based diet as a response to PCa.

theguardian.com/environment...

"Strawberries, spinach and kale among most pesticide-heavy"

"Conventionally farmed kale could contain up to 18 pesticides"

"About 70% of fresh produce sold in the US has pesticide residues on it even after it is washed, according to a health advocacy group.

According to the Environmental Working Group’s annual analysis of US Department of Agriculture data, strawberries, spinach and kale are among the most pesticide-heavy produce, while avocados, sweetcorn and pineapples had the lowest level of residues.

More than 92% of kale tested contained two or more pesticide residues, according to the analysis, and a single sample of conventionally farmed kale could contain up to 18 different pesticides.

Dacthal – the most common pesticide found, which was detected in nearly 60% of kale samples, is banned in Europe and classified as a possible human carcinogen in the US.

“We definitely acknowledge and support that everybody should be eating healthy fruits and vegetables as part of their diet regardless of if they’re conventional or organic,” said Alexis Temkin, a toxicologist working with the EWG.

“But what we try to highlight with the Shopper’s Guide to Produce is building on a body of evidence that shows mixtures of pesticides can have adverse effects.”

Other foods on the group’s “dirty dozen” list include grapes, cherries, apples, tomatoes and potatoes. In contrast, its “clean 15” list includes avocados, onions and cauliflower.

Leonardo Trasande, an environmental medicine specialist at the New York University medical school, called the EWG report “widely respected” and said it can inform shoppers who want to buy some organic fruits and vegetables, but would like to know which ones they could prioritize.

Despite a growing body of research, scientists say it is difficult to pinpoint how many pesticides people are exposed to in their daily lives, and in what quantity. And it is also hard to say how those chemicals in combination affect the body.

One recent French study found that people eating organic foods were at a significantly lower risk of developing cancer, although it suggested that if those findings were confirmed, the underlying factors would require more research. Nutritional experts at Harvard University cautioned that that study did not analyze residue levels in participants’ bodies to confirm exposure levels.

While 90% of Americans have detectable pesticide levels in their urine and blood, “the health consequences of consuming pesticide residues from conventionally grown foods are unknown, as are the effects of choosing organic foods or conventionally grown foods known to have fewer pesticide residues,” they said.

A separate Harvard study found that for women undergoing fertility treatment, those who ate more high-pesticide fruits and vegetables were less likely to have a live birth.

The CDC explains that “a wide range of health effects, acute and chronic, are associated with exposures to some pesticides,” including nervous system impacts, skin and eye irritation, cancer and endocrine disorders.

“The health risks from pesticide exposure depend on the toxicity of the pesticides, the amount a person is exposed to, and the duration and the route of exposure,” the CDC says, noting evidence suggests children are at higher risk.

The Environmental Protection Agency sets rules for how pesticides are used, but those rules do not necessarily prevent cumulative exposure in a person’s diet.

The agency is fighting a court order to ban chlorpyrifos, a pesticide that is associated with development disabilities in children.

EPA has also scaled back what types of exposure it will consider when evaluating human health risks. And President Trump has appointed a former executive from the industry lobbying group the American Chemistry Council, Nancy Beck, as the head of its toxic chemical unit."

-Patrick

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pjoshea13 profile image
pjoshea13
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12 Replies
Magnus1964 profile image
Magnus1964

Go for organic fruit's and vegetables, locally grown if possible.

BrianF505 profile image
BrianF505 in reply to Magnus1964

I’m a follower of the dirty dozen/clean 15. Or whatever the numbers are now. Plus as

Much local as I can get and grow.

cujoe profile image
cujoe

Magus is on the right track. I now only eat organic produce and fruit. (and grain products due to gylphosate uses as herbicide - AND as a desiccant??) EWG provides the two excellent guides below:

About EWG's Shopper’s Guide to Pesticides in Produce™

ewg.org/foodnews/about.php

EWG's "Diry Dozen"

ewg.org/foodnews/dirty-doze...

and their "Clean Fifteen"

ewg.org/foodnews/clean-fift...

Always worth repeating: EAT Well to Be Well - cujoe

pjoshea13 profile image
pjoshea13 in reply to cujoe

Cujoe,

I grow tomatoes every year. Up on the deck where critters mostly don't get to. Perhaps I will try my hand at kale.

-Patrick

cujoe profile image
cujoe in reply to pjoshea13

Home-grown (done right) beats em all, hands down. Altho', rather than tomatoes, I just assumed you were a master brew-master who spent part of the year in Louisville.

osheaslouisville.net/patric...

Keep the taps open & Be Well - cujoe

pjoshea13 profile image
pjoshea13 in reply to cujoe

A good friend lives outside Louisville. He loves his beer - I must ask him about the joint. But Asheville is now the ultimate beer town. No need for me to leave home.

Did I ever mention that the hops in a good IPA might help against PCa?

-Patrick

cujoe profile image
cujoe in reply to pjoshea13

Patrick, I know that you and a world-renown winter-season gator-wrestler extraordinaire both live (at least part of the year) in the fine city of Asheville - and I must say I am somewhat jealous. However, as a Florence-surviving liveaboard on the eastern end of the state of NC, I really don't have much reason to complain.

BTW, I have though of trying some container-grown herbs this year, as I get my home-grown tomatoes from a nephew in Charlotte. Keep GatorMan from getting into too much trouble this summer, what with the thin air and all the local Asheville entertainment. Take Care - cujoe

Kuanyin profile image
Kuanyin

Honestly, Patrick, what are we supposed to make of such information? What about acid rain that falls indiscriminately; what about the pesticides blowing from farmer A's fields to farmer B's; what about all of the cows who ingest the so-called organic diet of grass? Chernobyl, Fukushima , poisoned streams, rivers, filled with discarded drugs, heavy metals ad nauseam? Actually, the lower one goes on the food chain, the lower the concentration of toxins. Ounce for ounce, you will probably get more mercury from tuna than from spinach.

cujoe profile image
cujoe in reply to Kuanyin

I posted this reply to a similar post over at another Hu cancer forum:

"With the proliferation of new chemical compounds each and every year, seems we are all being exposed to potential disease-causing toxins that are basically treated as being "innocent until proven guilty". After all, since they can't be tested on humans before they are released into the products and services we all consume, we are basically all in a perpetual clinical trial for their safety - or harm. Not a formula for good health outcomes for us or the generations to come."

Turns out we are all just human lab rats for the special interests that now run the country. All we can do is stay informed and make the best choices we can about where we live, what we eat, and what sort of chemicals we use in our daily lives. Good Luck - as we will all need it. Be Well - cujoe

pjoshea13 profile image
pjoshea13

Humulus lupulus (hops) contain some interesting phytochemicals & there are a dozen or so PCa cell studies.

Here is a full-text from last year:

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl...

"Xanthohumol (XN) and four minor hops prenylflavonoids: α,β-dihydroxanthohumol (2HXN), isoxanthohumol (IXN), 8-prenylnaringenin (8PN), and 6-prenylnaringenin (6PN), were tested for antiproliferative activity towards human cancer and normal cell lines."

"Xanthohumol exhibited higher antiproliferative activity than cisplatin (CP) against five cancer cell lines: ovarian resistant to cisplatin A2780cis, breast MDA-MB-231 and T-47D, prostate PC-3, and colon HT-29."

-Patrick

monte1111 profile image
monte1111

Well now I an hopping up and down for joy. At least I am consuming something that may fight Pca. I have 2 tomato bush plants that I will try to nurture this summer. The gardens I used to have are sadly memories. May your blossoms bloom.

j-o-h-n profile image
j-o-h-n

Chocolate chip ice cream (two scoops) wife not looking then three scoops.

Good Luck, Good Health and Good Humor.

j-o-h-n Thursday 03/21/2019 7:46 PM DST

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