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  • "Cancer Risk from French Fries"

  • In the latest study on dietary patterns and breast-cancer risk among women,

  • those eating healthier had only a quarter of the odds of breast cancer,

  • whereas less healthy eating was associated with

  • up to nearly 8 times the odds of breast cancer.

  • Included in the unhealthy pattern were deep-fried foods,

  • which have previously been linked to breast cancer,

  • as well as pancreatic cancer, lung cancer, oral and throat cancers,

  • esophageal cancer, and cancer of the voice box.

  • No deep fried foods?!

  • What's a southern belle to do?

  • Well, instead of deep-frying, how about the traditional Southern diet

  • characterized by high intakes of cooked greens, beans, legumes,

  • cabbage, sweet potatoes, and cornbread,

  • which may reduce the risk of invasive breast cancer significantly.

  • What about the consumption of deep-fried foods

  • and risk of prostate cancer?

  • We didn't know, until now.

  • They found that eating French fries, fried chicken,

  • fried fish, and doughnuts was associated with

  • about a third greater odds of prostate cancer,

  • and after stratifying for tumor aggressiveness,

  • found even slightly stronger associations with more aggressive disease,

  • suggesting that regular intake of deep-fried foods

  • may contribute to progression of prostate cancer as well.

  • What's in fried foods that's so bad for us?

  • Just heating oils that hot can generate potentially carcinogenic compounds,

  • and then known carcinogens such as heterocyclic amines

  • and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons form

  • when the muscles of chickens and fish are cooked at that temperature.

  • And deep-fried plants can form different chemicals like acrylamide.

  • I did a video about acrylamide back in 2008,

  • suggesting it's a probable human carcinogen.

  • Since then a study suggested pregnant women may want to cut back

  • on French fries to protect the growth of their baby's body and brain.

  • And based on a study feeding people a little bag of potato chips

  • every day for a month, it now seems acrylamide

  • may cause inflammation as well,

  • which may explain its purported role in cancer progression.

  • Acrylamide intake has been associated in some studies

  • with endometrial cancer and ovarian cancer, lung cancer,

  • tied also to kidney cancer, and esophageal cancer.

  • But how much cancer risk are we talking about?

  • We didn't know...until now.

  • An excess lifetime cancer risk assessment for French fries.

  • They picked on French fries because they comprise by far

  • the greatest percentage contribution of acrylamide

  • to the diets of children.

  • They estimated that at most, 1 or 2 boys and girls out of every ten thousand

  • would develop cancer eating French fries

  • that they would otherwise NOT have gotten if they hadn't eaten French fries.

  • So it's not as bad as eating something like fried fish or fried chicken,

  • but how much is that saying,

  • particularly for female hormonal cancers such as breast cancer?

  • Now, the level of cancer risk associated with French fries

  • in both boys and girls depends for how long and how hot they're fried at.

  • In Europe, the food industry swore

  • that they'd self-regulate and control fry times

  • to decrease acrylamide levels, but...

  • they apparently didn't.

  • No subsequent change in acrylamide levels in French fries.

  • Researchers continue to urge that

  • the cooking temperature should be as low as possible

  • and the cooking time should be as short as possible

  • while still maintaining a tasty quality.

  • Wouldn't want to reduce cancer risk too much

  • might not taste as good!

  • Blanching the potatoes first reduces acrylamide formation,

  • but potato chip companies complain

  • that not only will it muck with the flavor,

  • but reduce the nutritional properties,

  • by leaching away some of the vitamin C.

  • But if we're relying on potato chips to get our Vitamin C,

  • acrylamide is probably the least of our worries.

"Cancer Risk from French Fries"

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