In the first study, BaP was shown to exacerbate existing cancer caused by asbestos. Asbestos being a well known and documented carcinogen. Can you say “promotional stimuli”?
Your point is completely invalid, of course. It is absolutely irrelevant that asbestos is a known carcinogen as the WHOLE POINT of the study was that abestos combined with benzopyrene, a known carcinogen and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon(PAH) present in cigarette-smoke and cooked foods, has a much nastier carcinogenic effect than asbestos on its own( re mention of an increased synergistic effect etc.). Plus, there are plenty of studies showing that benzopyrene on its own is carcinogenic without the need of asbestos or similiar carcinogen:-
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8832894
In the second study, sperm were washed of all their natural fluids and then flooded with various concentrations of BaP, all of them hundreds of times the levels that would be found in the body, and sperm function was affected. Wonder what would happen if they flooded them with various concentrations of salt water, vinegar, fruit juice, or a host of other common things we consume. All of the above will instantly kill sperm but seem to be relatively harmless, and some might say enjoyable, even when consumed in large quantities and high concentrations.
I’m afraid you’ve been conned by a rather hoary old-wives’ tale/urban legend which has since proven false re that saltwater remark – it seems that sperm do eventually die after dispersal but the saltwater notion is apparently not valid. The TV show Mythbusters did a routine experiment and managed to disprove the notion that one could use acidic drinks like cola as an effective spermicide. They also used as a comparison, a safe sample of sperm in a saline solution. Indeed, saline solutions are commonly used to store sperm quite safely and are offered on sale all over :-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MythBusters_(2003_season)#101_Uses_For_ColaWhile dispersal of sperm will eventually kill off sperm, due to quite other reasons, it isn’t quite as easy, therefore, to kill off sperm. More to the point, such damage done to sperm seems to include damage to the DNA of sperm, which is something only benzopyrene seems to do, unlike fruit-juice or whatever. In other words, microscopic amounts of benzopyrene, a type of PAH, will have a slight negative effect on sperm re DNA-damage or overall infertility but not other more harmless substances - and, over a lifetime of ingesting daily amounts of such PAHs one can expect more damage to occur.
Your third study states that 4 different lines of breast cancer cells were exposed to BaP and the DNA of these cancer cells was effected. Apparently it has no effect on normal cells as these weren’t mentioned.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC223267/
This is pure equivocation. The fact that that 1 particular study didn’t happen to mention the effect on normal cells just cancerous ones, does not remotely mean that normal cells are not affected. Indeed, there are studies showing that normal cells are indeed affected by benzopyrene re DNA damage or other aspects:-
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC220015/http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC220015/?page=1http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC349016/
The final link is about the effects of smoking. I’ve never smoked as my body reacted violently when I attempted it, and I trusted that it was telling me this was not a good thing. Therefore I’ve chosen not to smoke my pork ribs, chicken, or grilled steaks. I prefer to eat them. My body has had no severe adverse reaction to eating grilled ribs, chicken, or steak, at least that I’ve been able to detect. But then I’m cheating as I’m in vivo, not in vitro.
This is pointless obfuscation on your part. I have already previously pointed out that the heat-created toxins found in cigarette-smoke(specifically HCAs and PAHs) are also found in cooked foods in general, not just smoked foods, so eating non-smoked cooked foods and not smoking could not prevent one from taking in such heat-created toxins. As for your mention of having no adverse reactions to eating grilled ribs, that is purely your personal claim, and rather pointless in view of the multitude of other RVAFers’ own anecdotes about the ill-health they got from eating grilled ribs, me being just 1 individual in the whole mob. Besides, I have previously had some people in appallingly bad health on SAD diets assure me that they were in fine health, so I prefer to rely on the fact that most cooked-foodists in the end suffer some form of age-related condition, derived from heat-created toxins in cooked foods, rather than just 1 lone individual’s vague assurances. The evidence linking AGEs to arthritis etc. is just too damning.
The lessons of the above studies are quite clear. 1. If you are either an in vitro cancer cell (specifically breast cancer or mesothelioma), or an in vitro sperm cell you should avoid solutions containing high concentrations of BaP. 2. Smoking tobacco (or anything else for that matter) is probably not the healthiest lifestyle choice, whether you are in vitro or in vivo.
Not in the slightest. The in vitro studies show that human cells are directly negatively affected by heat-created toxins, making it extremely unlikely that the human body, as a whole, is unaffected. Plus, the data on the negative effects of HCAs/PAHs in cigarette-smoke is also applicable to the danger of eating cooked foods, as HCAs/PAHs are also found in cooked foods as well as cigarette-smoke and car-exhaust fumes – indeed, 1 past link showed that we take in such toxins in much greater amounts than we breathe in via air-pollution.
Though entertaining, might I suggest we abandon this foolishness and let the thread get on with arguing the merits of tallow vs butter?
Lex
Well, obviously, I was already well aware no amount of scientific evidence, however solid, would manage to convince you, given your religious beliefs on the subject of cooking. But it was a useful means to summarise, for RVAFers in general, a very tiny proportion of the multitude of scientific studies confirming the harm done by cooked foods(I particularly appreciate the reports in the studies and media about the fact that certain heat-created toxins found in cooked foods are also found in cigarette-smoke and car-exhaust fumes). The vast majority of us(except you it seems) have plenty of anecdotal evidence of their own to support the notion that cooking causes minor to major degrees of harm, and having their own findings confirmed by science is very useful indeed.
Well, back to the so-called "merits" of tallow vs butter - six of one and half a dozen of the other re extent of their usefulness but anyway....