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Scottish Sun
02-06-2025
- Health
- Scottish Sun
The 84p supplement that can ‘FLUSH out cancer-causing microplastics' revealed
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A CHEAP supplement made from oats could help flush deadly "forever chemicals" from your body, US scientists have found. These toxic substances - known as PFAS (polyfluoroalkyl substances) - are found in non-stick pans, food wrappers, plastic containers and even stain-proof carpets. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 2 Oat beta-glucan fibre could help flush deadly 'forever chemicals' from your body Credit: Getty They build up in the body over time and have been linked to cancer, infertility, liver damage and hormone disruption. But a new study by researchers at Boston University suggests a simple dietary fibre could help reduce PFAS levels in the blood. In the trial, 42 men were given 1g of oat beta-glucan fibre, a soluble oat bran fibre before every meal for four weeks. Another 30 took a placebo made from rice. The fibre is found naturally in oats, mushrooms and seeds. After a month, blood tests showed the fibre group had an 8 per cent drop in two of the most dangerous forms of PFAS: PFOA and PFOS, both linked to cancer and hormone disruption. Scientists believe the fibre works by binding to bile in the gut, which PFAS attach to, and helping excrete it all through poo, rather than letting it seep into the bloodstream. The study, published in Environmental Health, in March 2025, is the first real evidence that something as simple as oat fibre could help clear out chemicals once thought to stay in the body for decades. But PFAS take years to break down, so longer studies are needed to confirm how effective fibre is in the long term. Experts also warned not all fibre works the same - beta-glucan is the key type used in the trial. Previous research has shown that the fibre can also support heart health by lowering cholesterol. What are PFAS? Like other forms of fibre it it also helps ease constipation by keeping bowels moving and reduces the risk of bowel cancer. More than 90 per cent of adults in the UK don't eat enough fibre, according to the National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS), with NHS guidelines recommending 30g of fibre a day. 2 The supplement is found naturally in oats Credit: Getty Oat beta-glucan supplements are available in the UK from health shops and online, often marketed for heart health or cholesterol. You'll need around 3g per day to match the study dose, typically taken as 1g before each meal. Holland and Barrett are selling a 14-day supply of Oatwell Original Oat Bran Powder with Beta-Glucan for £10.12 - which works out to 84p per dose.


New Indian Express
02-05-2025
- Politics
- New Indian Express
Top court stays relocation of deer from Hauz Khas park, calls for their proper upkeep
NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has restrained the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) and other authorities from shifting the deer in the Deer Park in Hauz Khas to forests in different states. In its interim direction on April 30, a two-judge bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan issued notice to the DDA's horticulture director and other respondents seeking their response after hearing a plea opposing the relocation. 'The issue involved in these Special Leave Petitions (filed by petitioner, NGO New Delhi Nature Society (NDNS)), as regards shifting of deer in Park at Hauz Khas, New Delhi. Issue notice, returnsable on May 16, 2025,' the top court said. The plea by NDNS claimed that around 600 deer in Hauz Khas were likely to be relocated without proper habitat assessments, vet checks, or safeguards for vulnerable groups like pregnant deer and fawns. The petitioner contended that three batches of deer had already been relocated hastily from Deer Park to sanctuaries in Rajasthan in contravention of wildlife protection laws. Invoking the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, NDNS claimed that using captive deer as prey amounts to cruelty, especially since Section 11 prohibits confining any animal in a manner that makes it an object of prey. 'For now, we restrain the respondents from shifting the existing deer out of Deer Park... We also make it clear that the deer shall be properly looked after by the respondents,' the bench said in its order. The petition alleged that DDA has treated CZA's withdrawal of recognition as a green signal to dismantle the park altogether without fulfilling legal requirements under the Wildlife Protection Act, 1972.