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Which vitamins do you really need to take? What foods can supercharge your energy? What fitness trends are smart, or silly? When is medical news really urgent, or overhyped? Find out from the straight-talking YOU Docs, who answer today's trickiest health questions.

Michael F. Roizen, MD

Michael F. Roizen, MD, is co-founder of RealAge, chief wellness officer at the Cleveland Clinic, and chairman of the RealAge Scientific Advisory Board.

Michael F. Roizen, MD

Mehmet C. Oz, MD

Mehmet C. Oz, MD, is a member of the RealAge Scientific Advisory Board and vice chairman of cardiovascular services, Department of Surgery, Columbia University Medical Center.

Mehmet C. Oz, MD

YOU Docs Daily

More Foods That Fight Cancer

Some cancers are sneakier than art thieves: You don't even know they're there until the damage has been done. But there's a way to thwart cancer's plans (there's probably a way to thwart art thieves' plans, too, but we'll leave that to other experts), and that's to fill your plate with a little tender-crisp crunch and a little zip. Specifically, spice up your broccoli with some red chili peppers.

In the lab, a compound called phenethyl isothiocyanate, found in cruciferous veggies including broccoli, cabbage, and cauliflower, stopped ovarian cancer cells from spreading. Previous studies of people with bladder, prostate, breast, and gut cancers showed that eating four to seven or more servings of cruciferous vegetables a week can prevent the growth of these cancers by 50%. Research also showed that capsaicin, abundant in red chili peppers, can help stop pancreatic cancer cells from spreading. That's like jailing the art thugs before they even begin the heist.

More than anything, cancer cells want energy. After all, these cells have a mechanism that makes them replicate very efficiently -- and also makes them stronger than normal cells in your body. If the cells don't get that energy, they kill themselves off because they outgrow their energy supply. Somehow, the compounds in chili peppers and these veggies encourage the killing-off process.

Add more broccoli to salads, pasta, and side dishes; increase the zip of nearly anything with chili peppers -- or pair these foods together in stir frys. And chalk another one up to the power of everyday foods.

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