Weak diaphoretic, calmative
Soy is useful for:
cancer risk reduction
high cholesterol
menopause
vaginitis
Soy and Reduction in Cholesterol:
A meta-analysis study that pooled thirty-eight trials for reanalysis
reported that a soy diet led to cholesterol reductions in 89% of
the studies. Increasing soy intake was associated with a 23 mg per
deciliter drop in total cholesterol levels.
Soy Beans and Breast Cancer:
Eating lots of beans may help protect you from breast cancer, possibly
because they contain so-called phytoestrogens that help block the
activity of cancer-promoting estrogen. Hispanic women in the Caribbean
and Mexico are known to have less breast cancer than American women.
One reason could be that Hispanic women eat twice as many beans-mainly
pinto, garbanzo and black beans-as American women.
Hispanic women average three-fourths of a cup of beans six days
a week. That's compared with beans three times a week for African-American
women and twice a week for white American women. Beans also possess
several anticancer compounds, including protease inhibitors and
phytates.
Soybeans contain compounds that can manipulate estrogen as well
as directly inhibit the growth of cancerous cells, theoretically
reducing the risk of breast cancer in women of all ages. One soybean
compound, in fact, is quite similar chemically to the drug tamoxifen,
given to certain women to help prevent breast cancer and its spread.
Animal studies have shown that the soybean's phytoestrogens counteract
cancer-promoting estrogen much the same way tamoxifen does. Researchers
believe that soybean's most active anticancer agent is genistein.
This was found to prevent breast tumors in animals. Human studies
are in progress.
Soybeans seem to protect Asian women against breast cancer. A recent
study found that premenopausal women in Singapore who ate twice
as much soy protein as most people had only half the risk of breast
cancer.
Soybeans are regarded as the likely primary reason Japanese women
have less breast cancer. Researchers found that those who ate the
most soybean foods had the highest urine concentrations of isoflavonoids,
which are anti- cancer agents, particularly against. breast cancer
and prostate cancer. Typically the women ate three ounces of soybean
products a day, including tofu (soybean curd), miso (soybean paste),
fermented soybeans and boiled soybeans. Eating miso has also decreased
both the occurrence and growth of breast tumors in animals. This
jibes with the observation that postmenopausal breast cancers grow
more slowly in Japanese women than in Caucasian women.
Soy and Stomach Cancer:
Soybeans may help. fight off stomach cancer. Japanese scientists
found that men and women who ate a bowl of rniso soup a day were
only one- third as apt to develop stomach cancer as those who never
ate it. Even eating it occasionally cut the odds of stomach cancer
by 17 percent in men and 19 percent in women.
NOTE: Only soybean protein appears protective. That includes soybeans,
textured soy protein, soy milk, tofu, miso and tempeh, but not soy
sauce or soybean oil.
Soy and Menaupaual Symptoms:
The mild estrogen activity of soy isoflavones may ease menopause
symptoms for some women, without creating estrogen-related problems.
A group of fifty-eight menopausal women, who experienced an average
of fourteen hot flashes per week, supplemented their diets with
either wheat flour or soy flour every day for three months; the
women taking the soy reduced their hot flashes by 40%. In addition,
soy may help regulate hormone levels in premenopausal women.
Miso and Vegetarians:
Vegetarians who exclude all animal protein and dairy can become
deficient in vitamin B12. The bacteria in naturally fermented miso
have been found to manufacture vitamin B12, making miso paste an
important vegetarian food. Japanese monks, who are well known for
their vitality and long life and eat no animal products, regularly
consume miso.
Improves Digestion:
Miso is used to relieve acid indigestion, symptoms of hangover,
and other digestive upsets. Because of this, it is used with ginger
and/or garlic to prevent and/or cure colds, improve digestive metabolism,
increase resistance to parasite infestations (which tend to occur
in an acid environments), and neutralize blood toxins and therefore
clear the skin.
Counteracts pollution and adverse effects of radiation:
Miso was also found to counteract the adverse effects of radiotherapy,
antibiotics, chemotherapy, and environmental pollution. By 1972,
Dr. Akizuki, his nurses, and co-workers, whose hospital was located
only 1 mile from the atomic bomb blast in Hiroshima in 1945, still
had experienced no side effects from radiation exposure, despite
the opposite experience of others in the near vicinity. He attributed
this to the fact that they regularly ate miso. Stimulated by Dr.
Akizuki's claims, Japanese scientists conducted a study of miso
and one of the ingredients used to make it, called natto. They found
a substance they called zybicolin, which is produced by the yeasts
of these products. It has the special ability to attract, absorb,
and discharge such radioactive elements as strontium. Miso is also
able to detoxify the harmful influences of tobacco and traffic pollution.
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