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Volume 10, Issue 43 - July 1, 2009
Soy foods linked to less risk of COPD

 

PERTH, Australia, June 26 (UPI) -- People who eat soy products have better lung function and are less likely to develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, Australian researchers said.

Dr. Fumi Hirayama and Andy Lee from Curtin University of Technology in Australia worked with a team of respiratory physicians to poll 300 patients with COPD from six Japanese hospitals and 340 age-matched control subjects from the same areas as the patients about their soy intake.

"Soy consumption was found to be positively correlated with lung function and inversely associated with the risk of COPD," Hirayama said in a statement. "It has been suggested that flavonoids from soy foods act as an anti-inflammatory agent in the lung, and can protect against tobacco carcinogens for smokers. However, further research is needed to understand the underlying biological mechanism."

Soy is a constituent of many Japanese foods, including tofu, or soybean curd; natto, or fermented soybeans; miso soup, or fermented soybean paste; bean sprouts and soy milk.

COPD is characterized by progressive decline in lung function and encompasses chronic bronchitis and emphysema. Long-term cigarette smoking causes almost 90 percent of COPD.

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