No and it sounds like garbage propaganda..  

It is of primary importance to remember that the mighty pharmaceutical 
companies with all of their multitudinous and very long arms are continuously 
waging war against the vitamin and mineral supplement industry.

Use common sense, proceed with caution, and for more information on vitamiin c 
visit the Dr. Linus Pauling site.  Google it.

Faith
Miss Charlene Mason sang "I will not pass this way again,"  giving obvious 
pleasure to the congregation.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carl Deb Charter 
  To: Undisclosed-Recipient:; 
  Sent: Friday, September 07, 2007 11:12 PM
  Subject: CS>Vitamin C Plus Fat Might Spur Cancer


  Interesting....anyone hear of this before?  Thanks

  Friday, September 7, 2007
  Vitamin C Plus Fat Might Spur Cancer
  Mixing in the stomach, this combo encourages carcinogens, study suggests

  (HealthDay News) -- When fat is present in the stomach, vitamin C transforms 
from a cancer-fighter to a possible contributor to malignancy, new research 
suggests. 

  Researchers at Western Infirmary in Glasgow, Scotland, analyzed the 
interaction between vitamin C and lipid (fat) in the upper stomach, which is 
particularly vulnerable to pre-cancerous changes and tumor growth. They focused 
on changes in nitrite chemistry. 

  Nitrites are present in human saliva and preserved foods. During the 
digestive process, they can be converted to cancer-causing compounds called 
nitrosamines, which form in acidic conditions. However, vitamin C usually 
inhibits their formation by converting nitrites to nitric oxide. 

  But the researchers found that when vitamin C and nitrites meet in 
environments with 10 percent fat, vitamin C multiplied the production of 
cancer-causing nitrosamines by eight to 140 times. 

  Without high fat levels, vitamin C curbed the levels of two nitrosamines by a 
factor of between five and 1,000. And it completely eliminated the production 
of the other two, the researchers said. 

  Fat remains in the stomach for some time after eating and also makes up the 
content of many cells lining the stomach, the study authors noted. 

  Writing in the September issue of Gut, the team theorized that this 
interaction explains why vitamin C supplements have not had significant success 
in reducing cancer risk. 

  More information 

  To learn more about dietary fats, visit the American Dietetic Association. 
  -- Madeline Vann

  SOURCE: Gut, news release, Sept. 3, 2007

<<clear.gif>>