Category > Curcumin (Turmeric)

Clyde’s PCa Diet

» 15 August 2007 » In Broccoli, Curcumin (Turmeric), Diet, Prostate Cancer, Salmon, Vegetarian and Vegan » 1 Comment

Hello, I’m a 69-year-old retired carpenter and published writer. I’ve never had a Free PSA reading, only two biopsies and 5 Finger-Waves (and two of those almost made me jump through the wall).

My diet is centered around ocean fish (tuna and salmon), veggies (a lot of brocolli and other cruciferous veggies — cauliflower, Brussel sprouts), fruits (in particular apricots, which are high in selenium), vitamins (E, A, D3, a good one-a-day vitamin), Essiac Tea at five in the A.M. (when my stomach is empty), heavy sprinkling of turmeric on my food (in Ayurvedic medicine of India this herb has been in usage for almost 2 millenia — it shrinks tumors), cayenne (for the capsicum), garlic powder (both sprinkled over food, like the turmeric).

Continue reading...

Turmeric/ Curcumin update

» 23 February 2007 » In Cancer, Cardiovascular, Curcumin (Turmeric), Diabetes » Comments Off

Turmeric, also called curcumin, has been used in Asian cookery for thousands of years. Powder ground from the dried root is an ingredient in curry. Turmeric is one of the cheaper spices and makes a vivid splash of color, so it gets heaped into low-market curry blends as fill. Not such a bad idea. In ongoing research on curcumin, biochemists in China report this month that curcumin downregulates homeobox gene NKX3.1 in prostate cancer cell LNCaP and could also dampen the androgen receptor’s sensitivity to this gene.

Independent studies have found that the Nkx3.1 homeobox gene has a key role in the prostate and may be implicated in start up of prostate cancer. Two M. D. Anderson researchers who are interested in curcumin’s anti-inflammatory effects and immune system enhancing activity suggest that “curcumin’s reported beneficial effects in arthritis, allergy, asthma, atherosclerosis, heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes, and cancer might be due in part to its ability to modulate the immune system. Together, these findings warrant further consideration of curcumin as a therapy for immune disorders.”

Read more about Turmeric (Curcumin) as a cancer-fighting spice.

Continue reading...