|
|
- Starbulletin.com
- Friday, November 19, 1999
- By Craig T. Kojima, Star-Bulletin
- Eating lots of tofu leads to "accelerated brain aging,"
a study says.
-
-
- A Hawaii research team says high consumption
of the soy product by a group of men lowered mental abilities
-
- By Helen Altonn Star-Bulletin Tapa
- Tofu is touted for its health benefits, but also may pose health
risks, says a Hawaii scientist. A Hawaii study shows a significant
statistical relationship between two or more servings of tofu
a week and "accelerated brain aging" and even an association
with Alzheimer's disease, says Dr. Lon White. The Pacific
Health Research Institute researcher urged caution at a recent
conference in Washington as scientists from around the world discussed
the role of soy products in the prevention and treatment of disease.
The symposium was sponsored by giant soybean growing and processing
firms such as Archer Daniels Midland and DuPont. The largely
unregulated food supplements industry is preparing to step up
sales, claiming that isoflavones, plant chemicals found in high
concentrations in soybeans, offer "natural" cures for
breast cancer, osteoporosis, prostate cancer, heart disease, menopausal
"hot flashes" and other chronic conditions.
-
- Negative conclusions
- But, White said in an interview, "The majority of scientists
said the data they were talking about for beneficial effects on
health is very weak" and doesn't really support health claims
for soy foods. White and his associates have been studying
diseases and aging in a group of Japanese-American men who volunteered
for medical research in 1965. The Honolulu Heart Program began
with 8,006 men born from 1900 through 1919. They were identified
through World War II Selective Service registration records.
In comparing the dietary habits and health of the Japanese-American
men in the study group between 1965 and 1993, White said the scientists
found "a significant link between tofu consumption during
midlife and loss of mental ability and even loss of brain weight."
-
- The men were questioned about 27 foods and drinks, with data
showing that those who ate more tofu were apt to have impaired
mental ability, White said. Tofu was the only consistent link
among the men, he said. The rate of brain impairment, which normally
increases with age, also went up faster in the men who ate the
most tofu, he said.
-
- "The test results were about equivalent to what they would
have been if they were five years older," he said. "Guys
who ate none, their test scores were as though they were five
years younger." The brains of 300 men who died also
were examined in a unique autopsy study conducted as part of the
Honolulu aging project, White said. The 300 men didn't appear
to have had any more strokes than the average person, and their
blood vessels didn't lookdifferent.
-
- "But what I did see was (that) the simple weight of the
brain was lower," he said. Shrinkage occurs naturally with
age, but atrophy progressed more rapidly in those men who had
consumed more tofu, White said.
-
- He said the wives of about 500 men also provided information
about what they ate, and the findings correlated with what their
husbands said.
-
- Stark contrast
- So the scientists obtained four independent indicators of an
adverse effect from frequent eating of tofu and changes in the
brain with aging, White said. Those who ate a lot of tofu,
by the time they were 75 or 80 looked five years older, he said.
-
- "Why in the world would that happen?" he said. "Everyone
knows protein in tofu and soy is wonderfully nutritious. Everyone
knows fats are wonderfully nutritious. "But more and
more and more over the last five to 10 years, people have been
claiming the health benefits of soy foods are less related to
its nutrient composition, proteins and fat, and more related to
other molecules that occur in tofu made by soy plants
and act as pharmacological agents."
-
- Isoflavones, the most talked about, "are molecules that
the soy plant makes while it's germinating to help it fend off
mold and other things that attack the plant in the ground,"
White said. They're plant molecules that look like estrogens
but they're not natural estrogens, he said. "When they get
into cells, they actually affect the metabolism of cells. They
inhabit certain kinds of enzymes and alter (the) metabolism of
cells.
-
- "The bottom line," stressed White, "is these
are not nutrients. They are drugs. They will have some benefits
and some negative things."
-
- Groundbreaking work
- White said his study, to his knowledge, is the only one to show
strong evidence of serious adverse effects from a soy product.
His group is seeking a new National Institutes of Health grant
to continue research on the effects of tofu. It may be beneficial
for heart disease and bones, White said. "We don't know.
All we know, in our study, is there appears to be an adverse relationship."
-
- Among those at the conference was Finnish scientist Herman Adlercreutz,
who became interested in soy after observing that breast cancer
and colon cancer were less common in Japan than in Finland. His
studies 20 years ago led to a scientific explosion of interest
in soy and its components. Adlercreutz believes more dietary soy,
a staple of Asian diets, would improve the health of Americans
and people of other Western countries. But he said at the conference,
"I am myself frightened a little bit by all of this. There
is so much we don't know."
-
- Mark Messina, a soy foods expert and former researcher with
the Diet and Cancer Branch of the National Cancer Institute, told
the scientists, "It's simply not possible as yet to draw
any conclusions about soy consumption and cancer prevention, but
further research is certainly warranted."
-
- Companies that make money from soy products are pushing hard
to have people think of them as "perfect food," White
said "But if we're talking about soy foods containing substances
that have effects on health that aren't nutrients, that are not
vitamins, or fat, but change how cells operate, they're acting
as drugs act. And the way we think of them should be how we think
about drugs."
|