Pitt enjoys chicken and beer while flying mile high

Melbourne, Sep 10 (ANI): While meeting Hollywood’s hottest hunk remains a dream for some, a passenger on a United Airlines flight was able to not only meet actor Brad Pitt but also film him.

Justin Ross Lee was fortunate enough to be seated alongside Pitt on a recent flight from Los Angeles to New York and he was able to capture the moment on his mobile phone.e has since posted the clip, showing Pitt tucking into his in-flight meal of chicken, enjoying a beer and catching some shut-eye, on brightcove.

“If Brad was any more down to earth, the jet never would have left the ground,” News.com.au quoted Lee as telling Star Magazine.

The New Yorker also enjoyed having a photo taken with the actor in the Los Angeles International Airport’s United Airlines first-class lounge. (ANI)

Kashmir tax on poultry produce from other states helps local farmers

Srinagar, Sep 4 (ANI): With an objective to improve the condition of local poultry farmers, the Jammu and Kashmir Government has imposed tax duties on poultry products being brought in from other states.

The state government has imposed Rs five per kilogram tax on broilers brought from other states and simultaneously it has reduced tax duty from Rs two to one rupee per chick for the poultry produce within the state.

“I pay almost Rs 60,000 in taxes each year. So, that amount, I can directly save. And we are also expecting that the chicken will sell Rs 5 more, which will be profitable for us,” said Jasbir Jhaggi, owner of a poultry farm.

Poultry farmers believe that Government’s initiative will improve their financial condition and also usher stability in the local poultry business.

“We are hoping that all the debt ridden poultry farmers will be able to repay their debts and loans, within six months. Most of these poultry farmers are otherwise unemployed start the business in small sheds at their houses as it requires little investments,” said Kuldeep Singh Raja, Chairman of Chicken Dealers Association.

Poultry traders in Jammu and Kashmir deliver more than 150 thousand eggs and 70,000 to 80,000 chickens per day to meet the demand within the state. (ANI)

US footballer claims being Farrah Fawcett’s first and last love

Melbourne, Aug 31 (ANI): A former US footballer claims that he was the first and last love of late actress Farrah Fawcett.

Greg Lott, who says he first met Fawcett in the 60s, also claims that actor Ryan O’Neal’s heart-wrenching return to her side and his support during her dying days was nothing more than an act for the camera.

According to The Mail, Lott dismissed the image of Fawcett and O’Neal’s tragic rapprochement as nothing but Hollywood fantasy, and says that for the last 11 years of her life, she was involved in a very private romance with him.

“We were blind, crazy, in love,” the Daily Telegraph quoted him as saying.

“Farrah was my best friend and my inspiration.

“We fell in love with each other all those years ago and we never really stopped loving each other. Our lives took us in very different directions but, in the end, her heart always came home to me and Texas,” he said.

Lott also claimed that O’Neal froze him out of Fawcett’s life against her will, and that she referred to O’Neal as the “Fat F*** from the beach”.

O’Neal’s spokesman has dismissed Lott’s claims as “categorically false”, but the actor’s son Griffin has stated otherwise.

“I have to thank Greg Lott for one thing: For loving Farrah the way she deserved to be loved. Ryan was just there for the acclaim,” he said.

Lott revealed the last time he spoke to Fawcett was a couple of months before she passed away.

“I last spoke to Farrah late on the night of April 9 – two-and-a-half months before she died. She was preparing to come home from a bout of treatment at St John’s Hospital in Santa Monica,” he said.

“She told me: ‘I’m coming home tomorrow. I love you and I will call you’,” he revealed.

When he did not hear from her, Lott flew to California in desperation, to her home in LA, but he claims O’Neal refused him entry.

“I never got to say goodbye to Farrah. Ryan shut me out of her life,” he said.

Lott, who dated Fawcett from when they were students at Texas University until 1970, got his second chance when her romance with O’Neal came unstuck in 1996 thanks to his volatile temper and infidelity.

“She called and we arranged to meet in Texas,” Lott said.

“She was doing a fundraiser for battered women and invited me to the event at a hotel. She walked into the room and the electricity was there between us,” he recalled.

Fawcett then invited him to visit her at her home in Bel Air, Los Angeles.

“She flew me out to Los Angeles and we fell into each other’s arms,” he said.

“Farrah was always a very sensual woman. She never wore make-up at home and would shop at cheap stores like Walmart for her sweatpants. She had no airs and graces. That’s what I loved about her. She looked a million dollars without doing anything.

“I would look at her sleeping in the early morning and she looked like an angel. I thought I was the luckiest man in the world. She told me, ‘I’ve had the Hollywood men but you’re a real man. You get me.

“She loved to cook and would make me Texan dishes like fried chicken. We didn’t go out much. We’d stay home and watch movies and make love,” he added. (ANI)

Foul odour from industrial chicken rendering facilities may soon be history

Washington, Aug 27 (ANI): A research team led by Indian-origin scientist from North Carolina State University has devised a new technique that can help eliminate foul odour and air pollutants from industrial chicken rendering facilities.

Rendering facilities take animal byproducts (e.g., skin, bones, feathers) and process them into useful products such as fertilizer. However, the rendering process produces extremely foul odours.

Currently, the industry uses chemical “scrubbers” to remove odor-causing agents, but this technique is not very effective.

Furthermore, some of the odour-causing compounds are aldehydes, which can combine with other atmospheric compounds to form ozone – triggering asthma attacks and causing other adverse respiratory health effects.

According to Praveen Kolar, assistant professor of biological and agricultural engineering, the inexpensive treatment process uses ozone and specially-designed catalysts to break down the odour-causing compounds.

The new technique with an effective filtration system takes advantage of catalytic oxidation to remove these odour-causing pollutants.

This process takes place at room temperature, so there are no energy costs, and results in only two byproducts: carbon dioxide and pure water.

The researchers developed the catalysts by coating structures made of activated carbon with a nanoscale film made of cobalt or nickel oxides.

“We used activated carbon because its porous structure gives it an extremely large surface area meaning that there is more area that can be exposed to the odorous agents,” said Kolar.

The cobalt and nickel oxide nanofilms make excellent catalysts, Kolar explains, “because they increase the rate of the chemical reaction between the odour-causing compounds and the ozone, making the process more efficient. They are also metals that are both readily available and relatively inexpensive.” (ANI)

Californian smashes hot dog eating world record by having 68 in 10 mins

London, July 05 (ANI): A man from California wolfed down 68 hot dogs in 10 minutes to smash the previous world record of 66 and to win America’s Coney Island annual hot dog eating contest.

Joey Chestnut defeated Takeru Kobayashi- six-time titleholder from Japan- in the food competition to retain the title at Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating for three consecutive years now, Sky News reports.

Chestnut is also currently number one in the world by the International Federation of Competitive Eating and has achieved many other feats in the past.

His world records include eating 9.8 pounds of pork rib meat in 12 minutes, 182 chicken wings in 30 minutes and drinking eight pints of milk in one minute.

Last year’s Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest had initially ended in a tie, with Chestnut and Kobayashi both eating up 59 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes. (ANI)

UK prison opens West End style restaurant

London, July 3 (ANI): A West End style restaurant called “The Clink” has opened up inside Her Majesty’s Prison High Down. iners can eat a two-course meal at the prison restaurant in Sutton, Surrey, for six pounds, reports The Telegraph.

Food consists of the freshest ingredients, much from the prison garden. However, diners have to make do with plastic cutlery for security reasons.

The chefs, waiters and kitchen porters are all inmates – who could be behind bars for murder or grievous bodily harm.

The Clink is the brainchild of Alberto Crisci, a former chef at Mirabelle, a French restaurant in Mayfair, London, which used to be owned by Marco Pierre White.

Crisci, who moved on to become High Down’s catering manager, said the idea was to rehabilitate prisoners and give them the skills to obtain jobs on release.

He stressed discipline was tougher than anything seen on a show like Hell’s Kitchen.

He told the Daily Mirror: “Prisoners only have to step out of line once and they are out. This is a real restaurant. I expect them to do exactly what I ask them to do.”

Wine is served – but strictly controlled for fear it goes missing. Mains include griddled minute steak, with sauce bearnaise, served with chips and a herb salad, or breast of chicken with pepperonata served with radicchio. This fare is available for 4.50 pounds, while ordering a desert costs 1.50 pounds. (ANI)

The list of 10 bizarre things that students leave behind

London, Jun 25 (ANI): A list of bizarre things that British students leave behind in their rooms includes snakes and white rabbits among other things.

The audit carried out by British student accommodation provider Unite has revealed that trophy traffic cones and road signs are no longer the must-have collectibles.

Instead, students are leaving behind a more eclectic group of items when they leave their digs at the end of the year, and pets were among the unusual items left behind.

Unite found a pair of budgies, a six-foot snake, and a white rabbit that had been left behind by their owners.

Among the other items left behind were frozen chicken feet, an inflatable pool, which was filled with water, a scuba diving suit and a pole-dancing pole.

The most common items left behind were mobile phone chargers (24 per cent), while almost one in five (19 per cent) of the items found were text books and one in ten (11 per cent) were iPods.

“After a year of working hard and playing hard, it is no surprise that students forget to pack everything at the end of term – and what they leave behind never fails to surprise us,” the Telegraph quoted Nathan Goddard, Unite sales and marketing director, as saying.

“From the risque to the ridiculous, we often wonder how these items make it into their rooms in the first place,” he added.

Unite, which has properties in 23 UK cities and towns said it tries to reunite students with their belongings.

Unclaimed items are donated to charity or recycled and all pets are found a good home.

The 10 most bizarre items:

1. A six-foot snake.

2. Pole dancing pole.

3. Life-size skeleton.

4. Pair of budgies.

5. Giant white pet rabbit.

6. 10ft inflatable outdoor pool filled with water.

7. Frozen chicken feet.

8. A whip and a copy of the Kama Sutra.

9. Scuba diving suit with air tank and flippers.

10. Full-size air hockey table. (ANI)

Creature dubbed ‘Loch Ness monster of the Vosges’ threatens French village

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London, Jun 22 (ANI): An elusive creature that has been dubbed the Loch Ness monster of the Vosges is being hunted by the French police, after residents reported seeing it on several occasions in a local pond.
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The creature, said to be a crocodile, was sighted in Xertigny, a village of some 3,000 inhabitants in the Vosges region in eastern France./pp
Villagers were so curious about the beast that they even tried luring it out of the water by placing a chicken on the bank of the pond, which was to no avail as the animal refused to appear./pp
The elusive creature has local authorities so worried that they are considering draining the pond after a special sonar device failed to bring light to the situation./pp
We have been around the pond several times and you can’t really say if anything is there, the Telegraph quoted Bruno Aime, vice-president of a local anglers’ association, as telling France Info radio./pp
I think it’s carp but it could also be a caiman of about 1.5 metres. The equipment doesn’t let you see the difference between a pike of a metre long and a caiman of 1.5 metres, he added./pp
Crocodiles are found only in zoos and parks in France. (ANI)/p

Rosemary extracts, Thai spices in meat may curb exposure to carcinogens

Washington, May 30 (ANI): Adding some rosemary extracts or Thai spices to cooked meat can reduce the risk of exposure to carcinogenic compounds involved in the promotion of cancer, suggests a new study.

“Just one of the spices would work,” said J. Scott Smith, a Kansas State University food chemistry professor who researched the issue for the Food Safety Consortium.

“Rosemary would be fine or one of the Thai spices would be fine,” Smith added.

The researchers revealed that some commercial rosemary extracts can inhibit the formation of HCAs or heterocyclic amines in cooked beef patties by 61 to 79 percent.

And Thai spices can inhibit the formation by about 40 to 43 percent.

The research has found that HCA levels increase as charring increases on meat skin and the moisture content decreases.

Bacon and rotisserie chicken had the highest HCA levels with deli meats and hot dogs showing the lowest. Chicken skin and breast meat had all five of the HCA types.

“We’re trying to evaluate these levels based on the way the consumer would eat the product,” said Smith.

“We just looked at different products that consumers are consuming. We really didn’t have good data on it, so we took a look at it to see what the actual risk would be,” Smith added. (ANI)

‘Tan-tastic’ bikini can make tan lines history

London, May 30 (ANI): The ugly-looking tan lines could soon be history – thanks to the efforts of a swimwear firm which has invented “tan-through” bikinis.

Because of tiny holes in the material, sun worshippers can get an all-over tan but without having to get naked.

The microscopic holes let 80 per cent of UV rays, which cause the skin to darken, to pass through.

The bikinis are made from a stretchy yarn described as “a chicken wire mesh material”. They are see-through when held up to the light.

The Tan Through range was created by Staffordshire-based Kiniki, reports The Telegraph.

A swimsuit bought direct from the company’s website costs 34.30 pounds while all other items are 17.43 pounds.

Kiniki owner John Walker, 58, said: “They are selling like hot cakes. We only officially launched four weeks ago but we cannot keep up with demand at the moment.”

He added: “We have a disclaimer saying customers have to put on a sensible level of sun block. We recommend that you put the same sun protection on underneath the swimsuit as you would on the exposed parts of your body.

“Customers have to be responsible because the fabric does let the light straight through.” (ANI)

Eating meat does not increase breast cancer risk in postmenopausal women

Washington, May 29 (ANI): Consuming red or white meat does not raise the risk of breast cancer in postmenopausal women, says a new study.

The large study, conducted by researchers at Albert Einstein College of Medicine of Yeshiva University, has been published in the International Journal of Cancer.

A number of previous studies have found that eating red meat or meat cooked at high temperatures increases the risk of breast cancer. (High temperatures -caused by grilling, barbecuing or pan-frying – produce high amounts of heterocyclic amines (HCAs) and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in meat; HCAs and PAHs are mutagens (chemicals capable of causing mutations in DNA) that can cause breast tumors in laboratory animals.)

But a link between meat in the diet and breast cancer in women hasn’t been established.

“Previous epidemiologic studies in humans looking at the amount of meat in the diet and estimated intakes of HCAs and PAHs in relation to breast cancer risk have yielded inconsistent results,” says lead author Geoffrey C. Kabat, Ph.D., M.S., senior epidemiologist in the department of epidemiology and population health at Einstein.

To reach the conclusion, Kabat and his colleagues analyzed data on 120,755 postmenopausal women who participated in the NIH-AARP Diet and Health Study, a collaboration between the National Institutes of Health and American Association of Retired Persons. When the women enrolled in the study (between 1995 and 1996), they gave detailed information on what types of food they ate and how often they ate certain foods. In addition, they provided information on meat-preparation methods.

Over the next eight years, approximately three percent, or 3,818, of the women developed breast cancer. The researchers found no evidence that the amount of meat consumed, meat-cooking methods used, or meat-mutagen intake was associated with an increased risk for breast cancer.

Reported meat intake included steak, hamburger, chicken, pork, processed meat and meat cooked at high temperatures.

The study, “Meat intake and meat preparation in relation to risk of postmenopausal breast cancer in the NIH-AARP diet and health study,” also found that consumption of meat or meat cooked at high temperatures, through grilling and oven-broiling, did not increase breast cancer rates in subgroups including obese women, those who did not have children, who were consumers of alcohol, who were smokers, who used menopausal hormone therapy, who had low levels of physical activity, or had a low intake of fruits or vegetables.

Neither the current study nor earlier studies assessed the diets of younger women.

“So we haven’t ruled out the possibility that eating meat and exposure to meat mutagens at a younger age – particularly during adolescence when the breasts are developing – may increase one’s risk of breast cancer,” says Kabat. (ANI)

Robin Williams’ heart op scares Tom Hanks into staying in shape

Washington, May 28 (ANI): Hollywood star Tom Hanks has hired a new chef to help him stay in shape, after hearing about his friend Robin Williams’ recent heart scare.

Williams took ill on a comedy tour, and had to undergo heart surgery to replace a valve in March.

Sources have revealed that the news proved so scary for Hanks that the actor decided on getting his own check-up done.

According to them, Hanks’ doctor warned him that yo-yoing dieting for film roles was damaging his health.

“Tom’s new chef travelled with him on the Angels and Demons press junket.

Robin’s heart surgery really drove home the point to Tom that if he wants to enjoy middle age, he’d better start taking care of himself,” Contactmusic quoted an insider as telling the National Enquirer.

“At home and on the road, his full-time meal maestro cooks steamed or broiled chicken, fish and lots of vegetables. Tom’s favourite cookie-dough ice cream is now a no no,” the source added. (ANI)

Jennifer Aniston’s pooch sits on director’s chair on new film’s sets

New Delhi, May 27 (ANI): Jennifer Aniston’s dog Norman has its own director’s chair on the sets of her new movie.

The ‘Friends’ star is so fond of her pooch that she brings him to set when she is shooting ‘The Baster’, reports the China Daily.

“Norman is important in Jennifer’s life, but the crew is fed up with having to dote on him. Jennifer needs him around all the time and she won’t stand for him being chained up. So the dog has his own chair near the director, and Jennifer also has a doggy masseuse tend to Norman every day,” a source told the National Enquirer magazine.

The 40-year-old actress ensures that Norman is walked three times a day, and is given meals from the actors’ catering van.

The source added: “She even insists that Norman eat with the crew and that he’s fed organic, human-grade food. So Jennifer’s assistant has special plates made up by the caterer with free-range white meat chicken and organic rice. Norman eats healthier and better than most humans.”

Jennifer’s love for the 13-year-old corgi-terrier has always hit headlines, be it for the dog’s 250 dollars a week massages or acupuncture treatments to combat his aching joints. (ANI)

UK Govt. advisor asks people to stop lamb, beer consumption to save the planet

London, May 25 (ANI): A Government adviser in the U.K. suggests that people stop consuming lamb and beer to save the planet.

David Kennedy, chief executive of the Committee on Climate Change, says that people should eat pork and chicken instead, as they produce fewer carbon emissions.

This suggestion follows a Government-funded study into greenhouse gases, which revealed that producing 2.2lbs of lamb was the equivalent of releasing 37lbs of carbon dioxide.

The study also found that vegetables like tomatoes only produce 20lbs of CO2, while potatoes release about 1lb of CO2, for each 2.2lbs of food.

Cows have also been found to be damaging to the environment, with the study showing that they release the equivalent of 35lbs of CO2 per 2.2lbs.

Besides, the study revealed that alcoholic drinks contributed significantly to emissions, with the growing and processing of hops and malt into beer and whisky producing 1.5 per cent of Britain’s greenhouse gases.

“Changing our lifestyles, including our diets, is going to be one of the crucial elements in cutting carbon emissions,” the Telegraph quoted David Kennedy, chief executive of the Committee on Climate Change, as saying.

The Government advisor has himself stopped eating doner kebabs, as they contain lamb.

“We are not saying that everyone should become vegetarian or give up drinking but moving towards less carbon intensive foods will reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve health,” he said.

The findings of the research attain significance considering that Britain has determined to reduce greenhouse gases by 80 per cent by 2050.

Meanwhile, Government-funded firm The Carbon Trust is working with food and drink companies to calculate the “carbon footprints” of products. (ANI)

3 in 4 four Brit kids don’t know how to boil an egg

London, May 20 (ANI): Three quarters of British kids do not know how to boil an egg, new research has found.

The poll for supermarket chain Morrisons found that almost half of the youngsters in the UK never or rarely help prepare their family’s evening meal.

The survey of 1,000 children and 1,000 parents showed that 37 percent kids preferred watching television or surfing the Internet to culinary pursuits.

During the study, 27 percent parents admitted it was easier to leave their children to amuse themselves rather than enlist them in cooking.

However, around a third of parents said that they wanted to teach their cooking, as they had inherited kitchen skills from their own mothers and fathers.

According to author Annable Karmel, teaching cooking to kids would also help them to develop skills in other areas.

“Cooking is a great way for children to learn about maths, measuring, and understanding time, so it’s worth the effort. What’s more it’s a great way to get fussy eaters to try new foods,” Sky News quoted her as saying.

Karmel suggests that by the age of six, kids should be able to chop vegetables, grate cheese and boil an egg, while 13-year-olds should be cooking fish, chicken and meat and baking potatoes.

By the age of 16, teenagers should have mastered risottos and pasta dishes.

The study showed that kids and parents still hold the ability to cook in high regard, with 80 percent viewing a culinary ability as an important skill. (ANI)

Heather Mills demonstrates her cooking skills in Sussex

London, May 18 (ANI): Charity campaigner Heather Mills recently demonstrated her cooking skills on a weekend at Sussex.

“I’ll be coming in on Sundays, making my speciality of all the roast potatoes, parsnips, all the veg and gravy,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

The former wife of Paul McCartney-dressed in apron, trousers, and atop tottering wedge heels-confidently displayed her cooking skills.

Heather prepared a meat-free “beefy” stir-fry, “chicken” curry, and sweet-corn chowder on a stage at a food festival in Brighton.

She looked calm and confident even when a member of the audience shouted out that he could smell her stir-fry burning.

She just retorted by saying: “Not true”. (ANI)

Heather Mills demonstrates her cooking skills in Sussex

London, May 18 (ANI): Charity campaigner Heather Mills recently demonstrated her cooking skills on a weekend at Sussex.

“I’ll be coming in on Sundays, making my speciality of all the roast potatoes, parsnips, all the veg and gravy,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

The former wife of Paul McCartney-dressed in apron, trousers, and atop tottering wedge heels-confidently displayed her cooking skills.

Heather prepared a meat-free “beefy” stir-fry, “chicken” curry, and sweet-corn chowder on a stage at a food festival in Brighton.

She looked calm and confident even when a member of the audience shouted out that he could smell her stir-fry burning.

She just retorted by saying: “Not true”. (ANI)

Endangered birds lay eggs on exclusive beach in Indonesia

Washington, May 17 (ANI): An endangered bird found only on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi, has been provided an exclusive stretch of sand as a protected nesting area, where it can lay eggs.

The bird in question is the maleo, a chicken-sized bird that lays its eggs in sand heated by either the sun or volcanism that occurs in its habitat on the island of Sulawesi.

Located on the Binerean Cape in northern Sulawesi, the 14-hectare beach is now owned by PALS (Pelestari Alam Liar dan Satwa, or Wildlife and Wildlands Conservation), a local NGO that works with WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) to conserve wildlife in Sulawesi.

The beach is now a protected habitat for the maleo, which relies on the sun-baked sands of beaches and in some instances, volcanically heated soil, to incubate its eggs, which it buries in the ground.

The beach was purchased for approximately 12,500 dolars, funds donated by the Lis Hudson Memorial Fund and the Singapore-based company Quvat Management. The project also was supported throughout by the Dutch-based Van Tienhoven Foundation.

“Protecting this beach is just the first step in what will soon be a comprehensive conservation project for the benefit of the maleo,” said Noviar Andayani, Country Director of WCS’s Indonesia Program.

“Fewer than 100 nesting sites still exist throughout the bird’s entire home range, so every one counts,” he added.

The maleo is a chicken-sized bird with a blackish back, a pink stomach, yellow facial skin, a red-orange beak and a black helmet or “casque.”

The bird’s eggs are some five times larger than those of a chicken and are buried by the parent birds in the soil and then abandoned.

The chicks hatch and emerge from the soil able to fly and fend for themselves. our maleo chicks were released in a ceremony held by WCS staff members and some 60 participants from local communities to commemorate the beach’s new protected status. he ceremonial party also released 98 green, leatherback, and olive ridley turtle hatchlings into the surf.

The beaches of Binerean Cape are an important nesting ground for all three species; in addition to protecting maleo nests, WCS staff members safeguard turtle nests which have produced some 500 hatchlings this season.

In addition to maleos and sea turtles, the beach supports a coconut farm that produces more than 10,000 coconuts per year. (ANI)

Beef, chicken, fish may help treat stomach ulcers

Washington, May 16 (ANI): Beef, chicken, fish, eggs, dairy products and some fruits and vegetables could help keep stomach ulcers at bay, says a new study.

Bacteria known as Helicobacter pylori are known to cause such ulcers, and thus antibiotics are used a primary therapy for such infection. But today the bacteria are growing increasingly resistant to antibiotics.

And now, the study by scientists at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has shown that the amino acid glutamine, found in many foods as well as in dietary supplements, may prove beneficial in offsetting gastric damage caused by H. pylori infection.

The findings offer the possibility of an alternative to antibiotics for the treatment of stomach ulcers.

“Our findings suggest that extra glutamine in the diet could protect against gastric damage caused by H. pylori. Gastric damage develops when the bacteria weakens the stomach’s protective mucous coating, damages cells and elicits a robust immune response that is ineffective at ridding the infection,” says senior author Dr. Susan Hagen, Associate Director of Research.

She noted that eventually, years of infection result in a combination of persistent gastritis, cell damage and an environment conducive to cancer development.

Glutamine is a nonessential amino acid naturally found in certain foods, including beef, chicken, fish, eggs, dairy products and some fruits and vegetables. L-glutamine – the biologically active isomer of glutamine – is widely used as a dietary supplement by body builders to increase muscle mass.

In earlier studies, researchers had shown that glutamine protects against cell death from H. pylori-produced ammonia.

“Our work demonstrated that the damaging effects of ammonia on gastric cells could be reversed completely by the administration of L-glutamine. The amino acid stimulated ammonia detoxification in the stomach – as it does in the liver – so that the effective concentration of ammonia was reduced, thereby blocking cell damage,” explained Hagen.

Thus, they hypothesized that a similar mechanism might be at work in the intact stomach infected with H. pylori.

After testing the hypothesis on mice, researchers found that at six-weeks-post infection, the animals exhibited increased expression of three cytokines – interleukin 4, interleukin 10 and transforming growth factor-alpha mRNA.

“These all play an important role in the stomach’s ability to protect against damaging effects resulting from other responses to H. pylori infection,” explained Hagen.

The study results showed that in 20 weeks, H. pylori-infected mice, that were fed the L-glutamine diet exhibited lower levels of inflammation than did the mice that received the standard control diet.

“Because many of the stomach pathologies during H. pylori infection [including cancer progression] are linked to high levels of inflammation, this result provides us with preliminary evidence that glutamine supplementation may be an alternative therapy for reducing the severity of infection,” explained Hagen.

She added that studies in human subjects would be the next step to determine the relevance of this finding in the clinical setting.

The study was published in the latest issue of the Journal of Nutrition. (ANI)