Sony’s chairman urges for healthier alternatives to popcorn in cinemas

London, March 17 (ANI): Michael Lynton, chairman and chief executive of Sony Pictures, has called for healthier alternatives to snacks such as butter dipped popcorn in cinemas.

Lynton urged a convention of cinema owners in Las Vegas to help manage the bulging concerns related to obesity by introducing granola bars, fruit salad, yogurt and vegetable crudités with dips.

“I can almost imagine the Romans eating popcorn and drinking Coke at the Colosseum 2,000 years ago. But by bringing healthier snacks into your concession stands you would be helping our country meet an urgent public health need,” Times Online quoted him as saying.

Lynton pointed out he was not looking to “close the window for popcorn, soda and candy” and realised what problems could be faced on the health drive.

He said: “I don’t think giant tubs of spinach or broccoli is a good idea. And nobody wants to eat cauliflower while watching Spider-Man, or drink a 40oz cup of prune juice.”

Lynton added: “I’m just talking about adding some healthier items to what you already sell.”

Deirdre Flynn, spokesman for the Popcorn Board, a non-profit organisation funded by US popcorn processors, said: “If you ask most consumers what they consider the number one movie snack, they will tell you it’s popcorn. Popcorn and movies have gone hand in hand since the early 1900s.” (ANI)

Why broccoli, cabbage, cauliflower are good for heart

Washington, Sept 5 (ANI): Here’s why broccoli, cabbage and cauliflower are good for the heart – a chemical found in these vegetables can boost a natural defence mechanism to protect arteries from disease.

The build up of fatty plaques in arteries called atherosclerosis leads to heart disease.

The Imperial College London team has shown that a protein that usually protects against plaque build up called Nrf2 is inactive in areas of arteries that are prone to disease.

Treatment with a chemical found in green “brassica” vegetables such as broccoli can activate Nrf2 in these disease-prone regions.

“We found that the innermost layer of cells at branches and bends of arteries lack the active form of Nrf2, which may explain why they are prone to inflammation and disease,” BBC News quoted lead researcher Dr Paul Evans as saying.

“Treatment with the natural compound sulforaphane reduced inflammation at the high-risk areas by ‘switching on’ Nrf2.

“Sulforaphane is found naturally in broccoli, so our next steps include testing whether simply eating broccoli, or other vegetables in their ‘family’, has the same protective effect.

“We also need to see if the compound can reduce the progression of disease in affected arteries,” he added.

Professor Peter Weissberg, medical director of the British Heart Foundation, which funded the research said that the new findings provide a possible mechanism by which eating vegetables protects against heart disease.

During the study, the researchers genetically engineered mice to lack the Nrf2 protein.

The research found that in straight sections of arteries Nrf2 was present in the endothelial ‘lining’ cells. Through its action on other proteins, it prevented the cells from becoming inflamed, an early stage in the development of atherosclerosis.

The study appears in Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology. (ANI)

How ‘angel’ and ‘devil’ brain areas interact while exercising self-control

Washington, May 1 (ANI): When on diet, skipping a favourite calorie-laden dessert can take a whole lot of self-control – an ability that comes easier to some people than others. Now, US scientists have identified an “angel” centre in the brain which holds back another “devil” area to stop individuals giving in to temptation.

Scientists from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) have uncovered differences in the brains of people who are able to exercise self-control versus those who find it almost impossible.

The key in the research is, while everyone uses the same single area of the brain to make these sorts of value-laden decisions, a second brain region modulates the activity of the first region in people with good self-control, allowing them to weigh more abstract factors like healthiness – in addition to basic desires such as taste to make a better overall choice.

The study has been published in the May 1 issue of the journal Science.

“A very basic question in economics, psychology, and even religion, is why some people can exercise self-control but others cannot,” notes Antonio Rangel, a Caltech associate professor of economics and the paper’s principal investigator.

“From the perspective of modern neuroscience, the question becomes, ‘What is special about the circuitry of brains that can exercise good behavioral self-control?’ This paper studies this question in the context of dieting decisions and provides an important insight,” he added.

That insight was the result of an innovative experiment: A group of volunteers- all self-reported dieters- were shown photos of 50 foods, including everything from Snickers bars to Jello to cauliflower. The participants were asked to rate each of the foods based on how good they thought that food would taste. Afterwards, they were shown the same slides again and asked to rate each of the foods based on its supposed health benefits.

From those ratings, the researchers selected an “index food” for each volunteer – a food that fell about in the middle of the pack in terms of tastiness and supposed health benefits.

The participant was then shown the 50 items one final time and was asked to choose between it and the index item. (To keep the choosers “honest” without forcing them to eat 50 different foods in one sitting, the researchers would randomly select a number corresponding to one of the slides, and the participant would have to eat whichever food had been chosen at that point.)

All three viewings of the slides were done with the participant inside an MRI scanner, so that the blood-oxygen level dependent signal (a proxy for neuronal activity) in specific areas of the brain could be measured.

After all the choices had been made, the researchers were able to pick out 19 volunteers who showed a significant amount of dietary self-control in their choices, picking mostly healthy foods, regardless of taste. They were also able to identify 18 additional volunteers who showed very little self-control, picking what they believed to be the tastier food most of the time, regardless of its nutritional value.

When they looked at the brain scans of the participants, researchers found significant differences in the brain activity of the self-control group as compared to the non-self-controllers.

Earlier studies have shown that value-based decisions are reflected in the activity of a region in the brain called the ventromedial prefrontal cortex, or vmPFC.

If activity in the vmPFC goes down, explains Todd Hare, a postdoctoral scholar in neuroeconomics and the first author on the Science paper, “it means the person is probably going to say no to that item; if it goes up, they’re likely to choose that item.”

In the non-self-controllers, Rangel notes, the vmPFC seemed to only take the taste of the food into consideration in making a decision.

“In the case of good self-controllers, however, another area of the brain-called the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex [DLPFC]–becomes active, and modulates the basic value signals so that the self-controllers can also incorporate health considerations into their decisions,” he explains. (ANI)

Griddle- and microwave-cooking maintain highest antioxidant levels in vegetables

Washington, April 19 (ANI): Griddling – cooking on a flat metal surface with no oil – or microwave cooking can help maintain the highest antioxidant levels in vegetables, according to a Spanish study.

Fruits and vegetables are considered to be rich in nutritional antioxidants, which provide cancer and disease-preventing effects. This is the reason why people are encouraged to eat several servings of fruits and vegetables.

Researchers at the University of Murcia and the University of Complutense in Spain analysed six cooking methods with 20 vegetables in order to determine how various food preparing methods affect antioxidant activity.

The six cooking methods studied were boiling, pressure-cooking, baking, microwaving, griddling and frying.

The researchers said that the highest antioxidant loss was observed in cauliflower after boiling and microwaving, peas after boiling, and zucchini after boiling and frying.

They also observed that green beans, beets, and garlic were found to keep their antioxidant levels after most cooking treatments.

According to them, the vegetables that increased their antioxidant levels after all cooking methods were green beans (except green beans after boiling), celery and carrots.

Artichoke was the only vegetable that kept its high antioxidant level during all the cooking methods, said the researchers.

Griddle- and microwave-cooking helped maintain the highest levels of antioxidants, produced the lowest losses while “pressure-cooking and boiling (led) to the greatest losses,” says lead researcher A. M. Jimenez-Monreal.

“In short, water is not the cook’s best friend when it comes to preparing vegetables,” the researcher added.

A research article on the study has been published in the Journal of Food Science, published by the Institute of Food Technologists. (ANI)

Broccoli can dramatically cut breast cancer risk

London, Jan 2 (ANI): Eating broccoli can significantly reduce the risk of developing breast cancer, say researchers.

The leafy vegetable along with other cruciferous vegetables, such as kale, cauliflower and cabbage, contains chemicals that prevent a number of different cancers.

However, now experts have discovered that the compound in broccoli can actually kill breast cancer cells.

University of California researchers have revealed for the first time how the healing power of these vegetables works in the cells, reports the Daily Express.

The study has been published in the journal Carcinogenesis.

The research, which was carried out by Leslie Wilson, professor of biochemistry and pharmacology, and Mary Ann Jordan, adjunct professor in the Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, at the university’s Santa Barbara laboratories, found that a compound in broccoli inhibits the rapid growth of tumour cells in a similar way to chemotherapy drug taxol and vincristine, a drug which kills cells that reproduce the fastest.

The drugs inhibit cell division during mitosis, the process by which cells split apart and divide.

Graduate student Olga Azarenko, who worked on the project, said: “Breast cancer, the second leading cause of cancer deaths in women, can be protected against by eating cruciferous vegetables such as cabbage and near relatives of cabbage such as broccoli and cauliflower.

“These vegetables contain compounds called isothiocyanates which we believe to be responsible for the cancer-preventive and anti-carcinogenic activities in these vegetables. Broccoli and broccoli sprouts have the highest amount of the isothiocyanates.

“Our paper focuses on the anti-cancer activity of one of these compounds, called sulforaphane, or SFN. It has already been shown to reduce the incidence and rate of chemically induced mammary tumours in animals. It inhibits the growth of cultured human breast cancer cells, leading to cell death.” (ANI)