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Contents
ForumPennies for Research Can Cut
Dollars From Health Care
The annual outlay for treatment and care of diseases linked to diet exceeds
$200 billion. For cardiovascular disease alone, estimated costs are more than
$56 billion annually. That's 1,000 times the USDA budget for human
nutrition research.
In spite of our ability to reduce human suffering through dietary changes,
the federal investment in human nutrition research has stagnated in real
dollars since the early 1980's. I am working to change that. Agricultural
Research Service nutrition program leaders have spent long hours planning the
agency's future direction for research aimed at reducing the toll of heart
disease, cancer, and other diseases of aging.
Nutrition scientists are only beginning, for example, to understand the
relationship of plant foods, their phytonutrients, and their role in health.
ARS has already taken a lead role in studying one class of
phytonutrientsthe carotenoidsmeasuring and cataloging their levels
in U.S. foods and in the human body since the early 1980's. Recent studies at
ARS's Western Human Nutrition Research Center found that when women ate too few
fruits and vegetables containing beta carotene and other carotenoids, they
experienced adverse hormone changes and tissue damage, even though they got
ample vitamin A in a supplement.
Researchers at the Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts
University in Boston are collaborating with Harvard University investigators to
determine the effectiveness of carotenoids in breast cancer prevention. And, as
you'll read in this issue, research on volunteers at the Beltsville (Maryland)
Human Nutrition Research Center indicates that five reasonable-size servings of
carotenoid-rich foods daily can raise levels of several carotenoids in blood
serum and colon cells and significantly improve immune capacity.
In other studies at Beltsville, researchers have discovered that two
carotenoidslutein and zeaxanthinare strong antioxidants. And they
are the only carotenoids found in the retina of the human eye, suggesting that
they may protect against a condition that leads to blindness in many elderly
people.
But carotenoids are only one class of compounds among the more than 600
phytonutrients in fruits, vegetables, beans, grains, and seeds.
These compounds include a wide range of chemical structures and protect us
by different modes of action. In addition to acting as antioxidants, they may
boost the immune system or encourage enzymes that detoxify carcinogens or bind
to excess estrogen that might otherwise promote cancers in the breast and other
tissues.
Identifying individual phytonutrients that are most beneficial to the human
body and determining their modus operandi are major issues for future study.
But a group of researchers at the Boston center has taken a different approach.
Using a sensitive chemical assay they developed, they measured the total
antioxidant capacity of whole foods. It turned out that the most potent foods
have dozens to hundreds of active compounds, many belonging to another class of
pigments known as flavonoids. Animal studies are now in progress to see if this
potency in the laboratory translates to antioxidant protection in living
systems.
With such a vast array of phytonutrients, many of which are still unknown,
it becomes obvious why it is so important to eat a variety of plant foods
rather than rely on supplements. ARS research will continue to identify the
most beneficial compounds, how they function and how to measure that function,
how much we need for optimal protection, what combinations of foods enhance
their absorption by the human body, and how this bioavailability is affected by
cooking or storage.
As more of this information becomes available, other sectors of ARS can
increase the amounts of phytonutrients we consume. One way is through plant
breeding: We've already produced varieties of tomatoes, sweetpotatoes, corn,
carrots, and cantaloupes with increased total carotene content. Our scientists
have also identified carotene-containing germplasm for vegetables that
typically contain no carotene, including cauliflower, cucumbers, and potatoes.
Soil nutrient levels and availability play a role in phytonutrient levels.
Food processing is another potential route for increasing intakeeither by
adding phytonutrients as food ingredients or by preventing their loss. And
postharvest research can find ways of maintaining high levels through shipping
and storage.
With extensive research in all these areas, ARS researchers are in a pivotal
position to conduct, collaborate in, and coordinate studies aimed at improving
the nutritional content of our food supply. In the agricultural sector, history
has shown that dollars spent on ARS research have multiplied in productivity
and products. I have no doubt that we can continue our record and help cut
health-care costs through adequately funded research into phytonutrients and
nutrition in general.
Floyd P. Horn
ARS Administrator
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