I try to remember that absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.
to quote the word tangling of Donald Rumsfeld
he was dropped on from a huge height for saying this but what he said his characteristically confusing way was true.
safrole may or may not be carcinogenic in humans, it is to an extent in animals, and so to quote 'it may reasonably be expected to be a carcinogen in humans'. whether it is or not is very hard to determine. we know we don't know.
there seems rather a lot of circumstantial evidence quick googling turned up:
http://carcin.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/20/12/2331
same dna adducts in humans as in rats.
betel chewing has been epidemiologically correlated with cancer in humans.
the most interesting studies would be on workers in plants where safrole is steam distilled out of natural sources, they will be exposed to increased levels of safrole, and additionally there is the healthy worker syndrome so any increase in cancer levels amongst these workers would be very strong evidence.
there is even less solid evidence for myristicin being carcinogenic but again strongly suspecting it and treating it accordingly is probably a reasonable position to take.
it seems there are some problems here, the subject of myristicin amination, perhaps humans are rat like in their metabolism and then call on rat liver studies to support the amination hypothesis in humans.
then when it comes to carcinogenisis and formation of DNA adducts people take the position that human metabolism is different to rats and therefore the rat studies are worthless.
Agreed that the main motivation for the FDA clampdown on safrole in foodstuffs and herbal products had more to do with that other three letter organisation.
whether the risk associated with nutmeg or safrole or myrisicin is significant in the great scheme of things is difficult to quantify, given that there is everyday exposure to known carcinogens, benzopyrene from diesel exhausts, formaldehyde from furnishings, dioxin in chlorinated materials, etc
so do I think it aminates in vivo to MMDA? perhaps.
to quote the word tangling of Donald Rumsfeld
Reports that say something hasn't happened are interesting to me, because as we know, there are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns — the ones we don't know we don't know."
he was dropped on from a huge height for saying this but what he said his characteristically confusing way was true.
safrole may or may not be carcinogenic in humans, it is to an extent in animals, and so to quote 'it may reasonably be expected to be a carcinogen in humans'. whether it is or not is very hard to determine. we know we don't know.
there seems rather a lot of circumstantial evidence quick googling turned up:
http://carcin.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/20/12/2331
same dna adducts in humans as in rats.
betel chewing has been epidemiologically correlated with cancer in humans.
the most interesting studies would be on workers in plants where safrole is steam distilled out of natural sources, they will be exposed to increased levels of safrole, and additionally there is the healthy worker syndrome so any increase in cancer levels amongst these workers would be very strong evidence.
there is even less solid evidence for myristicin being carcinogenic but again strongly suspecting it and treating it accordingly is probably a reasonable position to take.
it seems there are some problems here, the subject of myristicin amination, perhaps humans are rat like in their metabolism and then call on rat liver studies to support the amination hypothesis in humans.
then when it comes to carcinogenisis and formation of DNA adducts people take the position that human metabolism is different to rats and therefore the rat studies are worthless.
Agreed that the main motivation for the FDA clampdown on safrole in foodstuffs and herbal products had more to do with that other three letter organisation.
whether the risk associated with nutmeg or safrole or myrisicin is significant in the great scheme of things is difficult to quantify, given that there is everyday exposure to known carcinogens, benzopyrene from diesel exhausts, formaldehyde from furnishings, dioxin in chlorinated materials, etc
so do I think it aminates in vivo to MMDA? perhaps.
