Two Must-Have Minerals for Fighting Breast Cancer

breast cancerNatural Society – by Barbara Minton

Women who want to avoid breast cancer or its recurrence need to be aware of the real risk factors, not the ones that oncologists use to scare you into accepting radiation and chemotherapy. Real risk factors are imbalances in the body that are within your control. While there are numerous ways to restore this balance, 2 compounds can be especially effective at preventing breast cancer – zinc and selenium.

But are you getting enough zinc and selenium, the two minerals that fight breast cancer and are key in maintaining balance in the body?  Recent research has added to the pile of data underscoring the importance of these two minerals in helping to keep women cancer-free.  

1. Healthy Breast Tissue is Highly Sensitive to the Presence of Zinc

New research from Pennsylvania State University has found that glands in the breast have unique zinc requirements resulting from their need to transfer extraordinary amounts of zinc into milk during lactation. When nursing women’s breasts are deficient in zinc, the result can be severe zinc deficiency in the infant, resulting in impaired growth and development.

When zinc is deficient or not properly metabolized in women, breast cancer is often an additional outcome. Lack of zinc has been implicated not only in the initiation of breast cancer, but also in the transition, progression, and metastasis of the disease, according to earlier researchWhen zinc is deficient, cellular functioning in the breast is severely compromised.

In France, scientists report that estrogen receptor (ER) expression in breast cancer is associated with differentiated tumors and a more favorable prognosis. The greater the resemblance of cancerous breast cells to non-cancerous breast cells, the less threatening is the disease.

Although the exact mechanism underlying the protective role ERs play against cancer progression remains to be researched, these scientists studied the actions of ER alpha, and documented that one of the ways this ER inhibits invasion is though its first zinc finger. A zinc finger is a group of proteins organized around a zinc ion that can bind to DNA and influence gene regulation. Without sufficient zinc in breast tissue, the zinc finger cannot be expressed.

Dr. David L.Watts reviewed the hair trace mineral reports of thousands of women and found that a pattern of elevated boron, copper and calcium levels with lower levels of zinc occurred in women with breast cancer. Boron and copper appear to make the body more sensitive to the stimulative effects of estrogen, and less responsive to the quieting effects of progesterone.

Zinc is the mineral that aids in the production and utilization of progesterone, so this pattern of lower zinc mineralization makes women less progesterone-responsive and more estrogen sensitive. According to Dr. Watts, raising zinc levels and lowering boron, copper and calcium levels can bring women into mineral balance and help in the creation of the hormone balance, so necessary for breast and overall good health.

The primary gene protecting women from breast cancer, p53, is thought to be the most frequently mutated or altered gene in the development of the disease. This gene requires zinc, and if it is missing, the gene becomes mutated, resulting in it becoming inactivated or suppressed. Dysfunction of p53 is well documented in the development of breast cancer, indicating that a zinc deficiency is a risk factor for breast cancer independent of the levels of boron, copper and calcium.

It has another important role in the lives of women, too. Zinc is required for protein synthesis and collagen formation. Without adequate levels of zinc, skin begins to sag and lose its elasticity. The optimal balance ratio for copper and zinc is 1 to 10 according to nutrition experts Phyllis Balch CNC and James Balch M.D.

In addition to sagging skin, deficiency of zinc may result in the loss of the senses of taste and smell. It can cause fingernails to become thin and peel. Other possible signs of zinc deficiency for women include hair loss, high cholesterol levels, impaired night vision, increased susceptibility to infection, memory impairment, diabetes, skin lesions, and slow wound healing.

As Dr. Watts’ work noted, minerals must be in balance to be effective. This means that getting them from whole foods is the best way to go so you don’t get too much of any one mineral.

Good food sources for zinc are brewer’s yeast, egg yolks, kelp, lamb, legumes, lima beans, liver, meats, mushrooms, pecans, poultry, pumpkin seeds, sardines, seafood, soy lecithin, sunflower seeds, and whole grains. Zinc is also found in alfalfa, burdock, cayenne, chamomile, dandelion, eyebright, fennel seeds, milk thistle, nettle, parsley, rose hips, sage, skullcap, and wild yam.

2. Selenium

Selenium is another potent mineral that has been shown to be effective against breast cancer as well as other cancers. The relationship between selenium status and intake among breast cancer patients was studied by scientists in Kuala Lumpur.

For the research, 64 women with breast cancer and 127 matched controls were interviewed to obtain information on their habitual dietary intakes, demographic data, and medical history. Selenium status was determined from toenail and hair analysis. The selenium intake among the women with breast cancer was significantly lower than the controls. Breast cancer risk decreased with increasing quartiles of selenium intake. Selenium in hair did not differ among breast cancer cases and controls, but selenium status in the nails of controls was significantly higher compared to the breast cancer cases.

In an older study conducted at the University of Washington, scientists investigated the signaling pathways modulated by selenium. They compared global gene expression profiles in mammary tissues from pubescent female rats maintained on a selenium (3ppm) diet with those on a standardized diet. The selenium-enriched diet altered the steady-state levels of genes involved in various cellular functioning, the most dramatic of which was the changes in the expression of multiple genes that regulate circadian rhythm.

The normal mammary tissue of rats fed the standardized diet showed little circadian oscillation relative to liver tissue. However, the normal mammary tissue of the selenium fed rats showed a progressive, time-dependent increase in the expression of circadian gene Per2, and a circadian regulated transcription factor.

Further, the results showed that the expression of Per2 and transcription mitigated RNA was significantly decreased in mammary tumors arising in selenium fed rats, suggesting that selenium-induced elevation in the expression of circadian genes was incompatible with mammary cancer. The researchers concluded that the Per 2 gene is an important target of selenium for cancer prevention.

Selenium’s main role is inhibiting the oxidation of fats as a component of the enzyme glutathione peroxidase, one of the most powerful of the antioxidants produced by the body. When combined with Vitamin E, selenium protects the immune system. It plays a vital role in regulating the effects of thyroid hormone on fat metabolism.

Symptoms of selenium deficiency are exhaustion, high cholesterol, infections, liver impairment, and pancreatic insufficiency. Westerners often do not have enough selenium, because it is processed out of the foods typically eaten. The typical Asian diet contains four times the amount of selenium as the typical American diet.

Selenium is found in meat and grains, but the level depends on the soil content where the food was produced and that is often quite low. Selenium may be found in brewer’s yeast, broccoli, brown rice, chicken, dairy products, garlic, kelp, liver, molasses, onions, salmon, seafood, vegetables, wheat germ, and whole grains. The best source of selenium is probably Brazil nuts. Eating just two average sized Brazil nuts provides about  240 mcg of selenium.

– See more at: http://naturalsociety.com/two-must-minerals-fighting-breast-cancer/#sthash.IQ5rkWpI.dpuf

One thought on “Two Must-Have Minerals for Fighting Breast Cancer

  1. Stop using anti-perspirant.

    It does what it says.
    It prevents your body from sweating out the toxins.
    Toxins have no where else to go but to your glands and
    fatty tissue… and there the toxins continue to build up until
    its a problem.

    Use soap and water instead.
    Use deodorant…
    But DO NOT use anti-perspirant.

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