Science Brief: Does Eating Broccoli Make Arthritis Better? Updated: It Also May Help With Diabetes

in #science7 years ago (edited)

So I have recently been trying out some, no-background, no nonsense science posts about current topics in the literature. This series has been well received, so today I have returned to follow this protocol yet again and hopefully produce for you something that is both interesting and not a big time investment!

For this post let us turn to a topic that I file under the category of pleasantly surprising. The article we will briefly discuss was published in the journal Nature: Scientific Reports and is titled "Isothiocyanates are detected in human synovial fluid following broccoli consumption and can affect the tissues of the knee joint."


Broccoli Is A Super Food

We all know that broccoli is a SUPER FOOD right? It's quite healthy for us, high in nutrients, high in fiber, low in calories. Tastes great (especially with cheese!!!), what's not to love?

The internet (and science too) is full of wild claims about the wondrous health properties of broccoli. It Fights Cancer due to the compound sulforaphane. Interestingly this particular compound is also thought to help prevent arthritis [3] due to its protective properties of cartilage (in our joints!)

What Were The Authors Studying?

They were continuing to study broccoli in relation to arthritis, specifically this compound solforaphane. Solforaphane (or 1-isothiocyanato-4-methylsulfinylbutane) is a compound that is produced in our bodies through processing of another compound called glucoraphanin, which is made by broccoli. Now as I mentioned there have been a variety of previous studies on solforaphane where people have identified quite a bit about how it accumulates in the body after eating broccoli (including in people on a high broccoli diet). [4], [5]. What researchers have also found is that despite the fact that this compound accumulates in the body, there is no known toxicity issue from consuming normal amounts of broccoli in the diet, even indefinitely.


This is what solforaphane looks like

In this study the authors wanted to see if the arthritis and joint protection from this compound were derived from it actually accumulating in those locations, or if the effect was due to it's work elsewhere in some other biochemical pathway.

Briefly What Did They Find?

  • People who ate more broccoli (which was high in the glucoraphanin) compound has higher levels of isothyocyanate compounds in their blood (this is the class that solforaphane belongs to), with an increase in solforaphane specifically noted.
  • In this study people who were eating a high glucoraphanin broccoli diet did not show a reduction in cartilage damage
  • However the people eating the high broccoli diet did have itothyocyanates found in the fluid between their joints (synovial fluid), while the control group did not.
  • They also saw a change in the protein composition in these synovial joint fluids, for only those on the high broccoli diet.

Conclusions

The authors illustrated in this article for the first time that broccoli consumption results in an accumulation of Solforaphane and other isothyocyanate compounds in joint fluid (these are the protective compounds), and noted a change in the protein composition of these fluids. These findings support prior research indicating that solforaphane has a direct joint protective activity. A number of these protein composition changes were reductions in ones which have been previously identified to associate with conditions like rhumatoid arthritis such as Calreticulin, which is found in higher levels in the joints of those suffering from arthritis [6]. The authors findings here illustrate potential mechanisms by which the protective properties of solforaphane might come.

I Have Arthritis... Should I Eat More Broccoli?

Well according to this article the answer isn't just broccoli as the control group here was also eating it. Rather the key was the group eating broccoli that was high in glucoraphanin. Beyond this, there are no guarantees of miracle cures, or that if you are eating broccoli that is high in glucoraphanin you won't develop arthritis. Nevertheless, considering all of the other health benefits associated with eating this nutrient dense veggie, it doesn't seem like the worst plan to try to incorporate it into your diet if you don't already eat it, or to try to eat it regularly if you already do ( I know I eat broccoli all the time! Yay me! )

Additional Interesting Research Edit 6-15-2017

A recent article published in the journal Science: Translational Medicine titled "Sulforaphane reduces hepatic glucose production and improves glucose control in patients with type 2 diabetes". Studying the very same compound Sulforaphane, which we discussed in this post originally, has found that high concentrations (administered in a pill) had a beneficial effect on blood glucose levels in diabetics. As far as the effect from consumption of broccoli is concerned, you would have to eat 5 kilograms of it daily, to get a comparable amount of the compound in your system (and I don't think anyone is going to start eating that much broccoli... sooo much fiber). So this is not something to think too much about (from a nutrition standpoint) nevertheless it is just another positive aspect of broccoli and these isothyocyanate compounds that it produces.

Sources

  1. https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-03629-5
  2. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2777483/
  3. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23983046
  4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16332662
  5. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11751429
  6. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20533543
  7. http://stm.sciencemag.org/content/9/394/eaah4477

All Non Cited Images Are From Pixabay.com or Flickr.com And Are Available Under Creative Commons Licenses

Any Gifs Are From Giphy.com and Are Also Available for Use Under Creative Commons Licences


If you like this work, please consider giving me a follow: @justtryme90. I am here to help spread scientific knowledge and break down primary publications in such a way so as to cut through the jargon and provide you the main conclusions in short (well compared to the original articles at least!) and easy to read posts.

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I have upvoted and resteemed the post. Cheers.

Thank you :)

Very good post backed up with scientific evidences in those published articles. I started eating broccoli like crazy about 3 years ago when it was clear to me that I would need to go for a major gynecological surgery (myomectomy including cystectomy). The issues I had were as a result of estrogen dominance. Brocolli helped me a lot to reduce bloating in my stomach, so much so that a girlfriend of mine noticed it and asked me what I was eating. I told her that every evening, for dinner, I was eating steamed broccoli with fish drizzled with a teaspoon of cold pressed hemp seed/olive oil. The indole-3-carbinol in broccoli is responsible for assisting the liver to clear excess estrogen. It's quite interesting to know from your post that broccoli also helps relieve arthritis. Well done, @justtryme90!!! Thank you for sharing.

Broccoli has quite a few good aspects to it, biochemically speaking. In addition to it's high fiber and general vitamin and mineral content. Truly of the best vegetables.

Absolutely, it is! Guess what? Your broccoli blog post was a very good reminder that it was time for me to prepare cream of broccoli soup, which I have just done. Here, the link https://steemit.com/food/@maryfavour/how-to-prepare-cream-brocolli-soup-using-soup-maker-part-1 . Thanks for the reminder.

Mmm broccoli soup :D

Cruciferous vegetables if you don't (just) like brocolli.

The amount of glucorphanin is not consistent across all cruciferous veggies, so while that may be somewhat true, it is not entirely consistently true. This article seems to indicate that as far as the protective activities reported here are concerned that high glucorphanin is necessary. Broccoli happens to be particularly high in this particular compound, when compared to other similar vegetables. I linked a source to this info in a different comment.

Very thorough.. esp. sighting all your sources.. I wonder how many other Cruciferous vegetables contain glucoraphanin ? I'm pretty sure broccoli, cabbage, brussel sprouts, cauliflower, and a few others are all hybridizations of the Sea Cabbage plant..

Brassica oleracea is a plant species that includes many common foods as cultivars, including cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, Brussels sprouts, collard greens, savoy, kohlrabi, and gai lan.

In its uncultivated form, it is called wild cabbage, and is native to coastal southern and western Europe.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassica_oleracea

Broccoli is delicious but if you have a thyroid condition,you should be aware of how long you cook your broccoli. Broccoli(and other cruciferous vegetables)contains goitrogens which can potentially have an impact on thyroid function, so make sure you cook your broccoli for a good 30 minutes.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cruciferous_vegetables

Also, why would you put cheese on broccoli? You're ruining it! ;-)

The jury is still out on thyocyanates (goitrogens just refers to any compound that can damage the thyroid, lets be more specific) and thyroid function.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4135245/

The cited article here is a review, in which they discuss the findings of a variety of articles. Some of the articles published on the subject found a positive correlation between thyroid cancer and consumption of cruciferious vegetables (like broccoli), others saw no correlation, some saw a correlation, but only if the person had an iodine deficiency in their diet. At this point I don't think there is a very clear link between broccoli consumption and thyroid troubles.

you should be aware of how long you cook your broccoli

well if you want to break down the thyocyanates then yes longer cook times will degrade the compounds, however these very same compounds are the ones discussed in this article with arthritic protective activities (Solforaphane is one of these compounds, and is the subject of this entire post!)

Also, why would you put cheese on broccoli? You're ruining it! ;-)

I like to do lots of things with it. Sometimes I like to add cheese with broccoli, its tasty. Roasting broccoli with some fresh garlic is also tasty. I mean there are a lot of things you can do with it other than just plain old steamed (which is also fine). I it raw too. :)

Thank you for that.

My G.P was the first person to tell me about the broccoli/thyroid link but there's no way I'm giving up my broccoli! At the end of the day, there are more pro's than con's to eating broccoli . Bring on the broccoli!

This is the case with so many aspects of life. Everything has benefits and drawbacks. If the benefits far outweigh the drawbacks then one should still go for it. Broccoli has just way too much good going for it. Heck yeah, bring on the broccoli!

loved ur article justtryme90, have u heard of sick building syndrome I think this article is important https://steemit.com/health/@whitedolphin/is-your-building-making-you-sick#comments

Thanks. Yeah I know of that, it's pretty logical that moldy dwellings are not good for general well being :)

Excellent article! Followed you!

Great post

We appreciate that you mentioned all the sources. Keep posting great content you are helping the community. ; )

I will try my best to be informative and leave the trail of breadcrumbs for others to follow and research into further, thank you for your support @health-trail.

Good news, broccoli is about the only vegetable I eat!!

Thats called winning man. :)

Couldn't agree more haha.

(Edited: Oop, I see some people already posted this fact!) Good stuff! I was just reading about how broccoli was developed from the same original species as so many other vegetables we eat today. It turns our broccoli, broccolini, cauliflower (ok no surprises yet right?), kale, cabbage, brussel sprouts, collard greens, and more are just cultivars/varieties of the same species. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brassica_oleracea

Yep broccoli are a nice result of traditional plant breeding.