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Broccoli - Cultivation, Nutritional Properties & Effects on Health (Hardcover)
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Broccoli - Cultivation, Nutritional Properties & Effects on Health (Hardcover)
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This book is a must read for anyone interested in Hippocrates'
dictum: "Let food be your medicine and medicine your food". This
book focuses on the therapeutic effects of broccoli phytochemicals,
in particular certain glucosinolate metabolites and flavonoids.
This book is organized in such a manner that people with only a
basic background in the biological sciences would profit greatly.
Anyone interested in any area of nutrigenomics would profit from
reading this book as well. This would include horticulturists
interested in how phytochemicals may be therapeutic, as well as
nutritionists and other health professionals who wish to better
understand how diet may influence gene expression and thereby
health. Persons engaged in the food-processing industry will also
find this book profitable. This book will be of especial interest
to graduate students as well as health profession students. The
book starts out with a chapter outlining the role of Professor Paul
Talalay of Johns Hopkins University and his colleagues, whom
initially identified activators of the Nrf2 signalling pathway as
playing a critical role in the anti-cancer properties of certain
phytochemicals and then went on to greatly develop this area of
nutrigenomic research, most recently with human clinical trials.
Since many of the therapeutic effects of broccoli consumption can
be attributed to specific glucosinolates, two chapters deal with
glucosinolates in general (Chapter Two) and glucosinolate
distribution in different broccoli cultivars specifically (Chapter
Three). Nrf2 activators will influence xenobiotic metabolism in a
number of ways; hence, Chapter Four gives an overview of xenobiotic
metabolism. Chronic diseases, a major target of nutraceuticals, are
a major health concern and place a huge burden on the health care
system. Chronic diseases are driven by oxidative stress and
generalized inflammation. To understand the medicinal effects of
plant bioactive compounds requires an understanding of the
mechanisms of oxidant production and scavenging, how oxidative
stress affects signalling pathways, and the roles of certain
phytochemicals in countering oxidative stress and inflammation.
This is the topic of Chapter Five. Chapter Six outlines the Nrf2
signalling pathway and its role in regaining redox and metabolic
homeostasis. Broccoli also contains bioactive flavonoids that
influence xenobotic metabolism and Nrf2 signalling. Chapter Seven
deals with flavonoids with a focus on the major flavonoids found in
broccoli, quercetin and kaempferol. Chapters Eight through Eleven
outline some of the basic research examining the effects of
sulforaphane on x-irradiation-mediated damage, UV-mediated skin
damage and perinatal ischemic insults. Chapters Twelve and Three
give an overview of some of the clinical trials that involve intake
of sulforaphane/broccoli sprouts. The last four chapters deal with
the agronomic aspects of broccoli, including cultivation,
post-harvest processing and how various cooking methods affect the
bioactive components in broccoli.
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