In a world of misinformation, Fitness Pudding is here to separate fact from fallacy, and science from fiction.
The amino acid, asparagine, is thought to be “digested” by cancer cells to help metastasize or spread throughout the body.
The study of all the recent headlines used mice, who were in-bred to lack immunity, and then injected with cancer cells.2
The mice were fed a chow with either no, low or high amounts of asparagine.
Spread of cancer to the lung was increased in mice on high-asparagine diet. Injecting an enzyme that blocked asparagine lowered the spread.
In Conclusion:
References
Special Thanks To: Dr. Jonathan Hommel, Dr. Mike Roberts, Dr. Chris Lockwood (drchrislockwood.com)
Dr. Faries has a Ph.D. in Behavioral Medicine and a Master of Science in Exercise Physiology, balanced with experience across the fitness industry, medicine, public health, research and extension.
His research explores why and how people initiate and maintain healthy behaviors, with focus on self-regulation success and failure. In other words, he seeks to better understand the common struggle with adopting healthy lifestyles, clarifying the reasons why we don’t “just do it.” Dr. Faries also holds unique expertise in medication adherence, when lifestyle is the medicine.
Dr. Faries also trains the next generation of ‘myth busters’ through medical and public health education, including his popular course, MythBusters: Health Edition.
Dr. Faries has served on the Board of Directors of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine, is founder of Lone Star Lifestyle Medicine for Texas, and is founder of FitnessPudding.com – a non-profit site dedicated to debunking common health and fitness myths.