(NaturalNews)
Seasoning food with turmeric and black pepper
can do more than just spice up a meal. Researchers
at the University of Michigan (U-M) Comprehensive
Cancer Center have found that the compounds
curcumin, which is derived from turmeric,
and piperine, derived from black pepper,
could play an important role in preventing
and even treating breast cancer.
Previous
research has already provided evidence that
curcumin and piperine may be potential cancer
treatments. However, the new U-M study,
just published online in the journal Breast
Cancer Research and Treatment, is the first
to suggest exactly how these natural spice
compounds could prevent cancer. The research
shows curcumin and piperine target stem
cells (unspecialized cells that can give
rise to any type of cell in an organ). This
is of major significance because cancer
stem cells comprise the small number of
cells inside a tumor that fuel the growth
of malignancies.
Current
chemotherapy agents are useless against
these cells — that's why
cancer can recur and spread despite rounds
of heavy duty, toxic chemo. But if cancer
stem cells could be eliminated and/or their
growth shut down, cancer should be controlled.