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“Food Has a Profound Effect on Your Health”

September 12, 2022 By Richard C. Young

By Pixel-Shot @ Shutterstock.com

How much of what you eat every day could be considered nutrition? That is, how much of what you eat supplies your body with what’s necessary for it to function properly? The average American isn’t getting nearly enough nutrients in their diet. According to a study from Oregon State University, over 40% of Americans aren’t getting enough calcium. For magnesium, 61% of adults aren’t getting enough. For potassium, 97% aren’t getting enough. For vitamin A, 51% of adults are short, for vitamin C it’s 43%, and for vitamin D it’s 95%. The list goes on, but the deficiencies in some of these most important nutrients are astounding. One great place to get your body the nutrients it needs is in broccoli. I’ve written to you before about broccoli, but here’s some more you should read from Dr. Joseph Mercola on the value of broccoli to your health. He writes on his blog, Mercola.com:

Food has a profound effect on your health — whether to prevent disease or reverse the negative effects of disease and illness. For example, decades of research have revealed the powerful effect that broccoli and other cruciferous vegetables have on several common health issues. Research1 has found that sulforaphane, one of broccoli’s claims to fame, is responsible for improving cognitive function and mood in older adults.

Other cruciferous vegetables include Brussels sprouts, cauliflower, cabbage, collards, kale and Bok choy. Broccoli has decades of research behind it that show it’s a valuable health-promoting food. While several compounds have demonstrated positive effects on health, one of the most widely studied is sulforaphane. The compound may be best known for its cancer-fighting properties.

For example, studies have shown that sulforaphane supports normal cell function and division while triggering apoptosis in colon,2 liver,3 prostate,4 breast5 and tobacco-induced lung cancer.6 While it is helpful in the prevention of cancer, data7 also shows it may also help in the treatment of breast cancer.

Sulforaphane also increases enzymes in your liver8 that help destroy cancer-causing chemicals you may consume or be exposed to in your environment. This compound has even been called “one of the most powerful anticarcinogens found in food.”9

Research has also shown it boosts detoxification of environmental toxins,10 helps prevent or treat high blood pressure,11 heart disease, Alzheimer’s disease,12 autism13 and even schizophrenia.14

Older Adults Experience Better Cognitive Function and Mood

The featured Japanese study15 was published in Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience. The researchers used 12 weeks of supplementation and found that the participants experienced greater processing speed and a reduction in negative mood as compared to the group who received the placebo.

Researchers began with the premise from past studies showing sulforaphane with cognitive training had a positive effect on cognitive function. They sought to investigate whether consuming sulforaphane could improve cognitive performance and mood in older adults.

They used a 12-week, double-blind, randomized controlled trial in which 144 adults — 73 men and 71 women — with an average age of 66.82 years were assigned to either a placebo group or a group that received sulforaphane supplementation.

The intervention group took 30 mg of glucoraphanin daily, which is converted to sulforaphane in the body. The researchers measured cognitive function, mood states, and serum and urine biomarkers at baseline and the conclusion of the intervention.

The group that took the sulforaphane supplementation exhibited an improvement in cognitive processing speed and a reduction in negative mood. Additionally, the intervention group had a higher sulforaphane N-acetyl L-cysteine (SFN-NAC) urine level, indicating they had consumed the glucoraphanin capsules. There were no other significant biomarkers of oxidative stress, neuroplasticity or inflammation.

The health benefits from eating cruciferous vegetables are linked to glucosinolates,16 which are plant chemicals that are metabolized into isothiocyanates, including sulforaphane. Broccoli contains an enzyme called myrosinase that helps to break down glucosinolates into erucin or sulforaphane. The researchers concluded:17

“Although we did not find any significant changes in antioxidant response, neural plasticity, or the neuroinflammation blood parameter, these results indicate that nutrition interventions using SFN can have positive effects on cognitive functioning and mood in healthy older adults.”

Sulforaphane’s Effect on the Heart, Leaky Gut and Obesity

Research data have shown that sulforaphane can help lower the risk of cardiovascular disease18 and reduce high blood pressure in an animal model.19 In one animal study,20 researchers sought to evaluate the efficacy of sulforaphane in the lab. Past data using exogenous antioxidants were not conclusive, which led the researchers to theorize that inducing endogenous antioxidant activities could have a promising cardioprotective effect.

Their theory was confirmed in the lab by demonstrating a reduction in intracellular reactive oxygen species production, which has a pathogenic response on the myocardium21 triggering damage and dysfunction. The antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties of sulforaphane may be related to the activation of the Nrf2 pathway that acts as a defense mechanism against oxidative stress.

Another animal study22,23 identified yet another benefit from broccoli — a healthy gut. Researchers from Penn State demonstrated that broccoli may help in the treatment of colitis and leaky gut syndrome when they discovered broccoli contains a compound called indolocarbazole (ICZ). This compound helps catalyze a healthy balance of bacteria and supports your immune system.

Researchers swapped out 15% of the animal’s diet for raw broccoli,24 which is equal to about 3.5 cups of broccoli each day for a human. While that is quite a bit of broccoli, researchers say you can get an equivalent amount from one cup of Brussel sprouts as these vegetables contain three times the amount of ICZ as broccoli.

Animal research25,26 has also suggested that sulforaphane can be used as a weight management tool. Mice that were fed a high fat diet with sulforaphane gained weight 15% slower than those getting the same diet without sulforaphane supplementation.

They also gain 20% less visceral fat. This fat collects around your internal organs and is particularly hazardous to your health. The researchers believe two different mechanisms were behind the results:27

  • Sulforaphane was found to speed up tissue browning. Brown fat is a beneficial type of body fat that helps you stay slim. It’s a heat-generating type of fat that burns energy rather than storing it.
  • Sulforaphane also decreased gut bacteria in the Desulfobivrionaceae family. These bacteria are known to produce toxins that contribute to metabolic endotoxemia and obesity.

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Richard C. Young
Richard C. Young
Richard C. Young is the editor of Young's World Money Forecast, and a contributing editor to both Richardcyoung.com and Youngresearch.com.
Richard C. Young
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