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Breast Fed Babies Have Lower Risk of Heart Disease
This title comes from the Healthmall Newsletter reporting on a study
published in the Archives of Disease in Childhood. In that study
investigators studied a group of 625 adults born in Amsterdam between 1943 and
1946, during the Dutch famine. Most study participants (83%) had been
exclusively breast-fed during their hospital stay at birth, (at least 10 days)
with the remainder being partially or completely bottle-fed with cows milk or
buttermilk. Blood samples were later obtained from these men and women
when they were between 48 and 53 years old, in 1995 - 1996.
The researchers report that the group who had been partially bottle-fed, or had
no breast feeding showed impaired insulin functioning. When insulin
function is disturbed, diabetes and other problems may result. In addition,
the bottle-fed group also had higher levels of cholesterol, indicating an
increased risk for heart disease.
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