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London Metro
13/02/03 by Jane Atherton
Scientists discovered
mutations among male rats whose mothers were fed a chemical from
the plant, usedin soya products such as flour, oil and tofu. They
grew up to have unusually large prostate glands and small testicles.
They also seemed unable to ejaculate, New Scientist magazine reported.
The levels of
genistein — a plant version of ocstrogen found in soya — given to
the rats were equivalent to those consumed by vegetarians eating
soya-rich diets.
‘Urologists on this project are
actually advising pregnant women to avoid soya,’ said Dr Sabra Klein,
who led the US-based researchers. They found that rodents which
did not eat genistein after weaning suffered just as severe effects
as those which
continued eating it —‘ suggesting the biggest impact was from exposure
in the womb and during breast feeding.
There is no evidence
that soya causes anything similar to happen in humans. For example,
no such sexual mutation has been observed in the sons of Asian and
vegetarian women, the two groups most likely to consume a lot of
soya.
But there is concern
about the genistein found in baby formula drinks and in supplements
taken as an alternative to hormone replacement therapy.
‘These
are serious questions that need answering,’ warned Chris Kirk, of
the University of Birmingham.
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