Comphensive Guide to Accessory Nutrients and Essential Oils by Dr. James Meschino - HTML preview

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28. Maestroni, GJ. T-Helper-2 lympocytes as peripheral target of melatonin signalling. J Pineal Res 1995;18:84-9.

29. Reiter RJ, et al. The role of melatonin in the pathophysiology of oxygen radical damage. In: Advances in Pineal Research. Vol. 8.

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Moller M, Pevet P, editors. London: John Libbey and Co.; 1994. p. 278.

30. Reitar RJ, Robinson J. Melatonin. New York, NY: Bantam Books; 1995. p. 166-7.

31. Shannon M. Alternative medicines toxicology: A review of selected agents. Clin Toxicol 1999;37:709-3.

32. Guardiola-Lemaitre B. Toxicology of melatonin. J Biol Rythms 1997;12:697-706.

33. Barchas J, et al. Acute Pharmacology of Melatonin. Nature 1967;214:919-220.

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34. Rubin RL, et al. Neuroendocrine aspects of primary indogenous depression, XI, Xerum melatonin measures in patients and matched

authors.

control subjects. Arch Gen Psychiat 1992;49:558-567.

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35. Peres MF, Seabra ML, Zukerman E, Tufik S. Cluster headache and melatonin. Lancet 2000;355:147[letter].

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36. Blau JN, Engel HO. A new cluster headache precipitant: increased body heat. Lancet 1999;354:1001-2.

37. Lissoni P, Barni S, Cazzaniga M, Ardizzoia A, Rovelli F, Brivio F, et al. Efficacy of the concomitant administration of the pineal hormone

melatonin in cancer immunotherapy with low-dose IL-2 in patients with advanced solid tumors who had progressed on IL-2 alone.

Oncology 1994;51(4):344-7.

38. Natural Products Encyclopedia. www.consumerslab.com: Melatonin.

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Meschino Health Comprehensive Guide to Accessory Nutrients and Essential Oils

Accessory Nutrients and Essential Oils

Modified Citrus Pectin

General Features

Modified Citrus Pectin is a dietary supplement that has demonstrated an ability to prevent the spread of cancer

(metastasis), with strong evidence to support its use in the prevention and/or management of prostate cancer

metastasis. Modified Citrus Pectin is a special form of pectin that has been altered in the laboratory by a proprietary

process that shortens the length of pectin’s polysaccharide chain. This results in a lower molecular weight, enabling

the molecule to be absorbed through the intestinal wall into the bloodstream. By contrast, pectin itself cannot be

absorbed from the intestinal tract into the bloodstream and thus, is primarily categorized as a type of water-soluble

fiber with a proven ability to lower cholesterol and provide other health benefits via its actions in the intestinal tract.

Pectin is found in the peel and pulp of citrus fruits such as lemons, grapefruits, oranges and tangerines. Its long chain

of monosaccharides has numerous branches with important binding capabilities, which play a key role in pectin’s

unique anti-metastatic attributes. Therefore, researchers were interested in manipulating pectin’s structure is such a

way as to allow it to be absorbed into the bloodstream, while maintaining its ability to bind to carbohydrate-binding

proteins (glycoproteins) on the surface of metastatic cancer cells, blocking their ability to invade adjacent tissue, and

inhibiting their proliferation and colonization into new tumor masses. As explained below, Modified Citrus Pectin does

not prevent the development of cancer (cancer initiation), but rather appears to play an important role in preventing the

spread of cancer to other tissues (metastasis), which usually is the manner in which cancer death occurs.

Principle Active Constituents

The laboratory modification of citrus pectin to Modified Citrus Pectin yields a galactose-rich pectin product with a lower

molecular weight than citrus pectin in its native (original) form. This structural modification allows Modified Citrus

Pectin to be absorbed from the intestinal tract into the bloodstream, and exert an anti-metastatic effect on cancer cells,

which contain certain carbohydrate-binding proteins (galectins) on their cell surface.

Clinical Application and Mechanism of Action

1. Preventing the Spread of Cancer (Anti-metastatic)

One of the dominant carbohydrates contained within Modified Citrus Pectin is galactose. Galactose has a strong

af inity for binding to the surface of metastatic cancer cells, which express a particular cell surface receptor known

as galectin-3 (a galactoside-binding lectin). In turn, the binding of Modified Citrus Pectin to the galectin-3 receptor

on metastatic cancer cells creates a type of galectin-3 blockade. With the galectin-3 receptor blocked in this

fashion, cancer cells are less able to adhere to other healthy tissues and cells, essentially inhibiting cancer cells

from invading and spreading to new areas and tissues in the body (anti-metastatic ef ect). As well, the blockade of

the galectin-3 receptor prevents cancer cells from adhering to each other, discouraging their ability to form colonies

(tumor mass). If cancer cells are deprived of their own adhesive ability, they fail to thrive and can be more easily

destroyed by the body’s immune system. Thus, Modified Citrus Pectin has been shown to at ach to galectin-3

receptors on metastatic cancer cells, preventing their clustering and colonization into a larger tumor mass and

blocking their ability to spread to other tissues. Interestingly, non-metastatic cancer cells do not have high levels of

galectins on their cell surface. Thus, it appears that these galectins are essential for the spread of cancer

(metastasis) to a very significant degree.

Research into this area, in fact, confirms that galectin-3 receptors play a very pivotal role in the metastasis of

cancer in the body. Galectins on the surface of cancer cells are known for their carbohydrate-binding abilities,

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Meschino Health Comprehensive Guide to Accessory Nutrients and Essential Oils

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playing an important role in cellular interactions during the metastatic process. In short, galectin-3 receptors bind to

the galactose molecules on neighboring cancer cells, as well as to the other sugars and monosaccharides on the

surface of healthy cells. Upon binding to other cancer cells they encourage the development of a larger tumor

mass (colonization) and upon binding to healthy cells they are able to invade these tissues and propagate further

spread of the cancer. In essence, Modified Citrus Pectin denies metastatic cancer cells of the opportunity of

at aching to other cancer cells and healthy cells, by binding to and fully saturating all of their galectin-3 cell surface

receptors. The importance of this mechanism of action is highlighted by the fact that many human cancer cells

express galectins on their cell surface, including carcinoma of the prostate, breast, colon, and larynx, as well as

lymphoma, melanoma and glioblastoma. Human studies of the colon, stomach and thyroid cancers have also

shown that the amount of galectin produced increases proportionally as the cancer progresses from its early to

advanced stages. Higher galectin levels encourage greater adhesion of cancer cells to each other, and also

facilitates the process of binding to non-cancerous cells at distant sites within the body.1,2,3,4,5,6

There is also evidence to show that Modified Citrus Pectin may augment the immune response in cancer by

enhancing cytotoxicity of CD3+ T-cells and natural killer cells, while also mediating increased monocyte cytotoxicity.

These ef ects have been shown to be due to the presence of rhamnogalacturonan, another constituent of Modified

Citrus Pectin.1

A significant number of animal trials have revealed that Modified Citrus Pectin inhibits metastasis of melanoma

cancer in mice, prostate cancer in rats 1,2,3 with other in vitro studies showing similar ef ects for cancer of the breast

and larynx.1

Human Cancer Studies - A pilot study involving prostate cancer patients who failed first-line androgen-deprivation

therapy, were in relapse after radical prostatectomy, external beam radiation therapy or cryosurgery, and were

Comment [U38]: Spelling? Prostatectomy? Yes

either untreated or of intermittent hormone blockade, demonstrated that supplementation with 15 gms per day of

, prostatectomy is correct

Modified Citrus Pectin (5 gms, three times per day) increased the length of the PSA doubling time by 30% in 4 of 7

patients, one patient had a partial response, one patient had stable disease and one patient did not respond. The

researchers conclude that Modified Citrus Pectin appears to slow the PSA doubling time in prostate cancer patients

with low levels of PSA, and that all patients were still alive three years after the of icial end of the study. This

research abstract of this study was presented at the International Conference on Diet and Prevention of Cancer;

May 28-June 2, 1999, Tampere, Finland.1 As reported by PM Kidd, Ph.D., Modified Citrus Pectin’s apparent safety

and proven anti-metastatic action, and the lack of proven therapies against metastasis would justify its inclusion

into comprehensive orthomolecular anticancer regimes.2,6