Aspirin & Heart Disease explores the connection between aspirin and heart disease. But is aspirin helpful for cancer as well? Yeah! Please see the first video below. But Dr Greger argues that those who adopt a Whole Food Plant-Based diet may not need any additional aspirin at all! Why?
Vitamin S? The key phytonutrient in aspirin that helps us fight cancer is salicylic acid. In this article from 2019, Dr Greger says,
"… some believe that ‘salicylic acid deficiency’ has important public health implications and that it should be classed as an essential vitamin, namely ‘Vitamin S’.' — Dr Greger
An
article from 2011 expounds upon the 'Vitamin S' story.
Do vegetarians have sufficiently high levels of salisylic acid (the proposed 'Vitamin S') via plants? In this article from 2019, Dr Greger explains:
The aspirin phytonutrient salicylic acid isn’t just found in willow trees, but throughout the plant kingdom, from blackberries and white onions to green apples, green beans, and beyond. This explains why the active ingredient in aspirin is found normally in the bloodstream even in people not taking aspirin. The levels of aspirin in people who eat fruits and vegetables are significantly higher than the levels of those who don’t. If we drink just one fruit smoothie, our levels rise within only 90 minutes. But, one smoothie isn’t going to do it, of course. We need to have regular fruit and vegetable consumption every day. Are these kinds of aspirin levels sufficient to suppress the expression of the inflammatory enzyme implicated in cancer growth and spread, though? Using umbilical cord and foreskin cells—where else would researchers get human tissue?—they found that even those low levels caused by smoothie consumption significantly suppressed the expression of this inflammatory enzyme on a genetic level.
… and he concludes with this sentence:
"I think everyone should take aspirin—but in the form of produce, not a pill." — Dr Greger
Foods rich in salicylic acid? The Foods with the Highest Aspirin Content (2019) mentions:
"Red chili powder, paprika, and turmeric contain a lot of salicylates, but cumin is about 1 percent aspirin by weight. Eating a teaspoon of cumin is like taking a baby aspirin." — Dr Greger
Should we eat organic? In the same article, Dr Greger mentions that organic foods were observed to have significantly higher amounts of salicylic acid! He says,
"… soups made from organic vegetables were found to have nearly six times more salicylic acid than soups prepared from conventionally-grown ingredients."