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Essential Nutrients in Carcinogenesis

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Cover of 'Essential Nutrients in Carcinogenesis'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 Introductory Remarks
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    Chapter 2 Brief History of the Role of Nutrition in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 3 Epidemiologic studies of vitamins and cancer of the lung, esophagus, and cervix.
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    Chapter 4 Selenium, vitamin E, fiber, and the incidence of human cancer: an epidemiologic perspective.
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    Chapter 5 Studies of nutrients and their relationship to cancer in the multiethnic population of Hawaii.
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    Chapter 6 Diet and Carcinogenesis: Historical Perspectives
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    Chapter 7 Influence of caloric intake on experimental carcinogenesis: a review.
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    Chapter 8 Dietary fat and experimental carcinogenesis: a summary of recent in vivo studies.
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    Chapter 9 Dietary Fat and Neoplasia--The Role of Net Energy in Enhancement of Carcinogenesis: Effects of Fat and Calories on the Immune System
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    Chapter 10 Oil Gavage Effects on Tumor Incidence in the National Toxicology Program’s 2-Year Carcinogenesis Bioassay
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    Chapter 11 Modification of Experimental Colon Carcinogenesis by Dietary Fibers
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    Chapter 12 Dietary fiber and human cancer: critique of the literature.
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    Chapter 13 Dietary cholesterol, serum cholesterol, and colon cancer: a review.
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    Chapter 14 Proteins and Amino Acids: Effects of Deficiencies and Specific Amino Acids
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    Chapter 15 Dietary Protein and Experimental Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 16 Role of Tryptophan in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 17 Hereditary Tyrosinemias (Type I): A New Vista on Tyrosine Toxicity and Cancer
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    Chapter 18 Lipotropic Factors and Oncogenesis
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    Chapter 19 Choline Deficiency and Chemical Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 20 The role of methionine in carcinogenesis in vivo
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    Chapter 21 Ethionine in the analysis of the possible separate roles of methionine and choline deficiencies in carcinogenesis.
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    Chapter 22 The Role of Vitamin B 12 and Folate in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 23 Role of Vitamin B 12 and Folate Deficiencies in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 24 The influence of niacin and nicotinamide on in vivo carcinogenesis.
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    Chapter 25 Vitamin B 6 Deficiency and Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 26 Riboflavin
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    Chapter 27 The Role of Ascorbic Acid in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 28 Some Thoughts on the Relationship between Vitamin a and Cancer
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    Chapter 29 Anticarcinogenic Effects of Retinoids in Animals
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    Chapter 30 The Relationship between the Vitamin D System and Cancer
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    Chapter 31 The Chemopreventive Role of Selenium in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 32 Inhibition of Chemical Carcinogenesis and Tumorigenesis by Selenium
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    Chapter 33 Mechanisms of Selenium Inhibition of Tumorigenesis
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    Chapter 34 Alcohol and Cancer
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    Chapter 35 The Role of Calcium, Magnesium, and Zinc in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 36 Role of Zinc Deficiency in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 37 The Role of Iodine in Carcinogenesis
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    Chapter 38 Summary and Overview
Attention for Chapter 7: Influence of caloric intake on experimental carcinogenesis: a review.
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Chapter title
Influence of caloric intake on experimental carcinogenesis: a review.
Chapter number 7
Book title
Essential Nutrients in Carcinogenesis
Published in
Advances in experimental medicine and biology, January 1986
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4613-1835-4_7
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4612-9025-4, 978-1-4613-1835-4
Authors

David Kritchevsky, David M. Klurfeld, Kritchevsky, David, Klurfeld, David M.

Abstract

The effect of caloric intake on tumor growth has been recognized for over 70 years. Inhibition of tumor growth depends primarily on the extent of caloric restriction, but tumor type, animal strain, and dietary composition all exert some influence. Caloric restriction is most effective when maintained during both initiation and promotion, but if limited to one of these phases, restriction during promotion appears to be the more effective modality. The types of tumor that have been studied include spontaneous mammary and lung tumors as well as tumors induced by organ-specific carcinogens or irradiation with ultraviolet light. Numerous investigators have studied the effects of fat, and a diet low in calories but high in fat is generally significantly more effective in inhibiting carcinogenesis than is a diet high in calories but low in fat. Mice fed high fat, low calorie diets exhibited 48% fewer chemically induced skin tumors and 61% fewer tumors induced by ultraviolet irradiation than did mice fed low fat, high calorie diets. Mice fed a diet containing 2% fat exhibited a 66% incidence of skin tumors, whereas mice fed an isocaloric diet containing 61% fat showed a 78% incidence. Rats whose diet was restricted in calories by 40% exhibited no mammary tumors (coconut oil as primary dietary fat) or 75% fewer tumors (corn oil as dietary fat) compared to ad libitum-fed controls; they also exhibited 47% fewer colonic tumors. The mechanism by which caloric restriction exerts its tumor-inhibiting effects remains to be elucidated.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 13 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
United States 2 15%
Unknown 11 85%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Other 4 31%
Researcher 3 23%
Student > Ph. D. Student 2 15%
Student > Master 1 8%
Professor > Associate Professor 1 8%
Other 1 8%
Unknown 1 8%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 5 38%
Medicine and Dentistry 4 31%
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 1 8%
Psychology 1 8%
Neuroscience 1 8%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 1 8%