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Beer: It's a Health Food!

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  • Beer: It's a Health Food!

    ABC News carried a story on this phonomenon just this morning.

    A compound found only in hops and the main product they are used in - beer - has rapidly gained interest as a micronutrient that might help prevent many types of cancer.

    Researchers at Oregon State University first discovered the cancer-related properties of this flavonoid compound called xanthohumol about 10 years ago. A recent publication by an OSU researcher in the journal Phytochemistry outlines the range of findings made since then. And many other scientists in programs around the world are also beginning to look at the value of these hops flavonoids for everything from preventing prostate or colon cancer to hormone replacement therapy for women.

    "Xanthohumol is one of the more significant compounds for cancer chemoprevention that we have studied," said Fred Stevens, a researcher with OSU's Linus Pauling Institute and an assistant professor of medicinal chemistry in the College of Pharmacy. "The published literature and research on its properties are just exploding at this point, and there's a great deal of interest."

    Quite a bit is now known about the biological mechanism of action of this compound and the ways it may help prevent cancer or have other metabolic value. But even before most of those studies have been completed, efforts are under way to isolate and market it as a food supplement. A "health beer" with enhanced levels of the compound is already being developed.

    "We can't say that drinking beer will help prevent cancer," Stevens said. "Most beer has low levels of this compound, and its absorption in the body is also limited. But if ways can be developed to significantly increase the levels of xanthohumol or use it as a nutritional supplement - that might be different. It clearly has some interesting cancer chemopreventive properties, and the only way people are getting any of it right now is through beer consumption."

    Xanthohumol was actually first discovered in 1913, isolated as a yellow substance found in hops. Researchers started studying its molecular structure in the 1950s, but for decades the only people who showed any real interest in it were brewers, who were trying to learn more about how hops help impart flavor to beer.

    In the 1990s, researchers at OSU, including Stevens and toxicologist Don Buhler, began to look at the compound from another perspective - its anti-cancer properties. It showed toxicity to human breast, colon and ovarian cancer cells, and most recently has shown some activity against prostate cancer in OSU studies.

    Xanthohumol appears to have several mechanisms of action that relate to its cancer preventive properties, scientists say. It, and other related flavonoid compounds found in hops, inhibit a family of enzymes, commonly called cytochromes P450 that can activate the cancer process. It also induces activity in a "quinone reductase" process that helps the body detoxify carcinogens. And it inhibits tumor growth at an early stage.

    In recent years, it has also been shown that some prenylflavonoids found in hops are potent phytoestrogens, and could ultimately have value in prevention or treatment of post-menopausal "hot flashes" and osteoporosis - but no proper clinical trials have been done to study this.

    Information about these compounds appears to be spreading. Hop-containing herbal preparations are already being marketed for breast enlargement in women, the OSU research report said, without waiting for tests to verify their safety or efficacy. And a supposed "health" beer is being developed in Germany with higher levels of xanthohumol.

    It's possible, scientists say, that hops might be produced or genetically engineered to have higher levels of xanthohumol, specifically to take advantage of its anti-cancer properties. Some beers already have higher levels of these compounds than others. The lager and pilsner beers commonly sold in domestic U.S. brews have fairly low levels of these compounds, but some porter, stout and ale brews have much higher levels.

    Ideally, researchers say, cancer chemoprevention is targeted at the early stages of cancer development and prevented by long-term exposure to non-toxic nutrients, food supplements or drugs that prevent the formation of cancers. With its broad spectrum activity, presence in food products, and ability to inhibit cancer at low concentrations, xanthohumol might be a good candidate for that list, experts say.

    Xanthohumol also appears to have a role as a fairly powerful antioxidant - even more than vitamin E. And it has shown the ability to reduce the oxidation of LDL, or bad cholesterol.

    Source : Oregon State University
    Last edited by Zkribbler; December 9, 2007, 15:42.

  • #2
    I'm drinking for me health. :hickup:
    Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

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    • #3
      Ja wohl! Sam Adam's Black Lager is just the ticket.

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      • #4
        The enemy cannot push a button if you disable his hand.

        Comment


        • #5
          Hops
          “I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
          - John 13:34-35 (NRSV)

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          • #6
            Re: Beer: It's a Health Food!

            Originally posted by Zkribbler

            Beer: It's a Health Food!
            Hallelujah

            :beer:

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            • #7
              Beer thread
              Blah

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
                Hops
                Malt

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                • #9
                  Next some tobacco company research will claim cigarettes have beneficial anti-oxidants.

                  Voluntary Human Extinction Movement http://www.vhemt.org/

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                  • #10
                    how could smoke not be healthful?

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Bkeela
                      Next some tobacco company research will claim cigarettes have beneficial anti-oxidants.
                      True. It's an anti-oxidant because the carbon monoxide in the smoke leaves no room for any oxygen whatsoever.

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                      • #12
                        I'm consitently stupid- Japher
                        I think that opinion in the United States is decidedly different from the rest of the world because we have a free press -- by free, I mean a virgorously presented right wing point of view on the air and available to all.- Ned

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                        • #13
                          beer

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                          • #14
                            hops price goes up 400 percent in a year

                            The horror!

                            Higher craft beer prices brewing

                            In the world of beer, you can't skip the hops -- even when the price goes up 400 percent in a year.

                            That jaw-dropping hike in the price of the twining vine flower -- an ingredient used to impart flavor to many brews -- is the result of market correction, bad crops and China, among other things. For beer lovers at the bar and the distributor, it may boil down to price hikes ranging from a quarter a glass to a few dollars a case in coming months.

                            ''We use about 12 different varieties of hops, and they went up 350 to 400 percent, each one,'' said Dan Weyerbacher, president of Weyerbacher Brewing Co. in Easton.

                            That translates to a jump from about $4 a pound to about $23 a pound. The price of another essential, malt, also has gone up, from about 40 cents a pound to about 80 cents a pound.

                            ''Demand is up, supply is down,'' said Beau Baden, brew master for the Brew Works restaurants in Allentown and Bethlehem.

                            The full impact isn't yet clear because many brewers are still working their way through existing stores of cheap hops. But Weyerbacher, for one, said bottles of craft brews may rise by 30 to 60 cents.

                            The trouble started about a decade ago, as a massive surplus of domestic hops drove prices down and forced many farmers out of hops-growing into more lucrative and less demanding crops, such as corn for ethanol. Most domestic hops are now grown in Oregon and Washington.

                            At the same time, hops consumption began skyrocketing in China and many craft brewers here and abroad began producing hops-rich beers. Some Weyerbacher varieties, for example, require about 5 pounds of hops per barrel, compared with just a few ounces per barrel used in some of the mass-produced beers gushing out of Anheuser-Busch and Molson Coors factories across the land.

                            More recently, drought in the United States and flooding in Europe has cut into the hops supply. The crop requires several growing seasons before it produces a marketable yield, so the market won't bounce back anytime soon. And, because large brewers purchase their supplies in advance through futures contracts, they get first crack at supplies, meaning microbrewers will have to scramble for the leftovers.

                            Weyerbacher -- which will produce about 5,200 barrels of beer this year, compared with 157 million barrels of Budweiser and other Anheuser-Busch brews -- will have to pass the cost along to customers. The company has produced a new price list, which will go into effect in the new year.

                            ''Sometime this month we will change over to the [hops] inventory we bought at the higher price,'' Weyerbacher said. ''But we'll be passing through the cost without tacking normal [profit] margins on at all.''

                            Nima Hadian of Shangy's, a distributor in Emmaus that carries 3,800 different beers, has received 18 price increase notices from brewers and said they average about $2 a case -- nothing that will deter a committed beer connoisseur, he said.

                            ''Craft brews give you the best bang for the buck, period, and that drinker isn't going to say, 'Rogue Dead Guy Ale is $32 dollars a case now. I can't afford it, so I'm going to buy a case of Natural Light.'''

                            Baden, whose recipes include a beer called Hops Explosion, anticipates the prices of the restaurants' seasonal brews rising a quarter or more per glass in coming months, though the flagship beers likely will remain the same price.

                            Even so, the brewers don't anticipate losing much of their core audience to the higher prices.

                            ''Maybe your favorite craft beer will go up 30 to 60 cents a bottle, but for a quality-of-life item, that's not too bad,'' Weyerbacher said, echoing Hadian's contention that the craft beer lover simply can't revert to lesser brands. ''Once you're used to the good quality -- and you can say the same thing for coffee, ice cream, breads -- you can't be satisfied with lesser quality.''

                            Perhaps that's why a man drove into the Guinness Brewery in Dublin last week, hitched a trailer loaded with 450 kegs of stout to his truck and took off -- though Baden said the culprit may have been after the stainless steel of the kegs, which fetches high prices in the scrap metal market.

                            Indeed, a steel keg that used to cost $90 now costs $175 -- another hit to the brewer's bottom line, along with increases in the price of glass and the general oil-related price hikes hitting all corners of the marketplace.

                            ''I've always said it's a tough business,'' Baden said. ''And you have to be crazy to be in it.''
                            Beer cost going up

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                            • #15
                              They must have read Zk's post.
                              WTG, Zk!
                              Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take, but by the moments that take your breath away.
                              "Hating America is something best left to Mobius. He is an expert Yank hater.
                              He also hates Texans and Australians, he does diversify." ~ Braindead

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