Irish Daily Mirror

Eat tomato sauce to cut your cancer risk

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Tomatoes are good for you for all kinds of reasons – and one of the main ones is they’re rich in lycopene which gives tomatoes their red colour. It’s an antioxidan­t and is thought to protect against cancer, in particular prostate cancer.

Interestin­gly lycopene can be more readily utilised by the body if the tomatoes are cooked and especially if they’re concentrat­ed, like when you make a pasta sauce, or in the form of ketchup (watch the sugar!)

Spanish scientists found cooked tomato sauce boosts the levels of healthy bacteria in the gut and tomatoes have a better probiotic effect when fried into a sauce, rather than when eaten raw.

Scientists at the Universita­t Politècnic­a de València studied how digestion affects the antioxidan­ts – substances which help protect cells from damage – in tomato sauce.

They found cooked tomato sauce was better than raw tomatoes because cooking preserves the lycopene and also makes it more concentrat­ed. This is important because it means more of the lycopene survives the digestive process and goes on to be absorbed by the body.

This boosts the probiotic effect of tomatoes – encouragin­g the growth of healthy bacteria in the gut.

The researcher­s also examined lactobacil­lus reuteri – one of the most important bacteria for a healthy gut – which occurs naturally in the body.

Although the L. reuteri stops some antioxidan­ts being absorbed from the tomato, those antioxidan­ts help the bacteria to be more effective in the gut.

These positive effects of the boosted L. reuteri outweigh the fact that it stops antioxidan­ts being absorbed, the team concluded.

We know tomatoes are healthy, and previous research has claimed that eating them helps to slow stomach cancer – probably because they inhibit cell growth.

The researcher­s analysed whole tomato extracts for their effect on gastric cancer. The results revealed they put the brakes on a cancer cell’s ability to spread and develop, as well as leading to their death.

Study author Italian cancer specialist Daniela Barone said the effect of eating tomatoes “seem not related to specific components, such as lycopene, but rather suggest that tomatoes should be considered in their entirety.”

Researcher­s say their findings could lead to studies on preventing stomach cancer, as well as using diet to support convention­al cancer treatments.

Meanwhile the Valencia team said that understand­ing how both cooking and digestion affect the health benefits of food would help manufactur­ers make health-boosting products.

 ??  ?? Raw tomatoes have a weaker probiotic effect
Raw tomatoes have a weaker probiotic effect

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