T. J. Clark & Company

 

T. J. Clark & Company

            "Often imitated, Never duplicated"

1-800-228-0872

Home

Products

Facilities

History

Disease
Information

Research

Distribution

Private Label

Affiliate
Program

 Vitamins: Vitamin A, Vitamine B complex, Vitamin B-1, Vitamin B-2, Vitamin B-3, Vitamin B-4, Vitamin B-5, Vitamin B-6Vitamin B-7, Vitamin B-9, Vitamin B-12, Vitamin B-15, Vitamin B-17, Vitamin C, Vitamin B-x, Vitamin D, Vitamin E, Vitamin F, Vitamin H, Vitamin K, Vitamin L, Inositol

Minerals: Calcium, Chloride, Magnesium, Phosphorus, Potassium, Sodium, Sulfur, Trace Minerals: Iodine, Iron, Zinc, Selenium, Fluoride, Chromium, Copper, Manganese, Molybdenum, Other Trace Minerals: Arsenic, Boron, Nickel, Silicon, Other Trace Elements: Aluminum, Bromine, Cadmium, Germanium, Lead, Lithium, Rubidium, Tin, Vanadium

日本語

Русская Версия

Deutsche

USRMA Health Search Wizard:

Para-Coumaric Acid

T. J. Clark Phytogenic Mineral FormulaPara-coumaric acid is a phenolic coumarin derivative that inhibits the development of stomach cancer and is found in various plants such as tomatoes, green peppers, carrots, strawberries, and pineapples, as well as herbal plants like basil, and turmeric. Activated during digestion, para-coumaric acid interferes with the development of cancer-causing nitrosamines in the stomach.

Nitrosamines, a group of organic compounds containing the reactive nitroso (N=O) moiety, were discovered more than 100 years ago, but it wasn't until the 1950s that they were found to be highly carcinogenic in laboratory animals. Food products, such as cured meats, pickled foods, and dried salted fish, are associated with the development of nitrosamines. It is believed that the process starts in the stomach when nitrate salts are reduced to form nitrites. The resulting nitrites combine with secondary amines, derived from bacterial action on meat proteins, to produce small amounts of carcinogenic nitrosamines.

Para-coumaric acid inhibits this process by binding to nitric acid derivatives, preventing them from combining with biochemical amines to form dangerous nitrosamines. Researchers have determined that 90 percent of all nitrosamine compounds tested in experimental animals have been shown to cause cancer. To date it has not been established which nitrosamine derivatives or what doses, if any, are safe for human consumption.

Phytochemicals
 
Ajoene
Butyl Phthalide

Calcium Pectate

Capsaicin
Catechin Hydrate
Coumarin
Coumesterol
Ellagic Acid
Genistein
Heliotropin
Indole
Lutein
Lycopene
Para-Coumaric Acid
Saponin
Sulforaphane
Zeaxanthin