Sunday, October 17, 2010

9 Plant Substances That Can be Dangerous to Eat

Some plants that we eat contain harmful substances if the wrong parts are eaten, or the right parts are eaten at the wrong time in their life cycle. This post will contain an overview of these substances and future posts will contain more details.

1. Alkaloids
 Alkaloids are bitter tasting substances that evolved in plants about the same time that mammals emerged. For this reason, alkaloids are thought to be part of a plant's protective mechanism against being eaten by a mammal.Commonly eaten plants of the nightshade family, such as potatoes and tomatoes, contain alkaloids. Green potatoes and potato sprouts contain dangerously high levels of alkaloids and should not be eaten. Alkaloids in large doses are poisonous
and in small doses alter the metabolism of mammals.The metabolism alteration may be the reason that nicotine and caffeine are so compelling for people.

2. Cyanogens 
These molecules also warn animals of their dangers through a bitter taste. However, they produce hydrogen cyanide which damages the enzymes that animals use to generate energy. Foods containing cyanogens can be made safe by open boiling, leaching in water, and fermentation. These foods include manioc, bamboo shoots, and some kinds of lima beans. The seeds of citrus, pome fruits, and stone fruits also generate cyanide.


3. Oxalates
These are salts of oxalic acid and waste products of plant metabolism. Soluble oxalates can combine with calcium to form painful kidney stones. In very large amounts, oxalic acid is corrosive and can be fatal. Oxalates are found in small amounts in spinach, chard, beets, amaranth, and rhubarb. 



4. Hydrazines 

These are compounds found in fairly large quantities in white mushrooms that we eat. They have been found to cause liver problems and cancer in mice, but not rats, and it is still unknown whether they cause problems in humans. It is probably wise to avoid eating large amounts of mushrooms.


5. Psoralens

These compounds can damage DNA and cause skin inflammations. They occur in some vegetables that have been handled poorly. They are found in celery, celery root, parsley, and parsnips that have become stressed by near-freezing temperatures, intense lights, or mold infections. The best precaution to take against these compounds is to buy these vegetables only when they appear to be very fresh.




6. Protease Inhibitors and Lectins
These compounds interfere with digestion. Protease inhibitors block the actions of protein digesting enzymes. Lectins bind to intestinal cells so that the cells cannot absorb nutrients. Lectins can also enter the bloodstream and bind red blood cells together. These compounds are found mostly in soy, kidney, and lima beans, however they can be inactivated by boiling for a long time. To avoid these compounds, do not eat raw or undercooked beans. Symptoms of exposure are similar to food poisoning symptoms.



7. Flavor Chemicals
These are generally eaten in small quantities, but can cause problems when eaten in large quantities. They include Safrole, an ingredient that was used in traditional root beers, but is no longer used. It causes DNA damage and was banned in 1960. Ingestion of large amounts of Mtyristicin, the major flavor compound in nutmeg, can cause intoxication and hallucinations when ingested in large amounts. Glycyrrhizin, a component of true licorice root can induce high blood pressure. Licorice candy today is made from artificial flavoring, not true licorice root. Coumarin is found in sweet clover, lavendar and tonka beans (a vanilla-like flavoring), and interferes with blood clotting.


8. Bracken-Fern Toxins
Bracken ferns contain toxins that can cause blood disorders and cancer in animals that graze on them. It is best to eat fiddleheads of other types of ferns such as ostrich ferns (Matteuccia species). Safety of eating ferns has not been the subject of extensive research, so it is not known for sure whether it is harmful in humans. The best approach may be to eat fiddleheads of bracken ferns in small quantities.





9. Toxic Amino Acids
Alfalfa sprouts and jack beans contain large amounts of Canavanine, a protein that interferes with some cell functions and has been associated with Lupus. Fava beans contain vicine and convicine which cause an blood cell destroying anemia in susceptible people.

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