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Reuters Article about High Blood Pressure and Formula Feeding  

post #1 of 10
Thread Starter 
Milk-Based Baby Formula Linked to Blood Pressure

By Maggie Fox, Health and Science Correspondent

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Babies fed a dairy-based formula grew up to have higher blood pressure than babies who were breast-fed, British researchers reported on Thursday.

Their study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition (news - web sites), supports several others that show substituting cow's milk for breast milk can lead to heart disease later in life.

The American Academy of Pediatrics says mothers should breastfeed babies for at least a year and longer if possible, while the World Health Organization (news - web sites) says two years should be the minimum.

Babies who get human milk are healthier, less likely to become obese and may have better brain function, studies have shown. Infant milk manufacturers have taken note and regularly adjust their formulas to more closely resemble human milk.

But in the 1970s, formulas were based on dried cow's milk, and breast-feeding was out of fashion in countries such as the United States and Britain. Richard Martin of the University of Bristol and colleagues followed up on babies first studied between 1972 and 1974.

Now in their 20s, those who were fed the most cow's milk formula were taller but had the highest blood pressure, Martin's team found. High blood pressure can lead to heart disease and stroke.

It could be the high sodium content of cow's milk affects the development of young babies, the researchers said. It may also simply be that cow's milk is higher in fat and calories overall -- and overfed babies, especially those that gain weight too rapidly early in life -- are prone to obesity and heart disease later in life.

More subtle factors could also be at work, they said.

"Mothers in the United Kingdom who breastfeed are likely to be better educated and to encourage healthier eating habits for their children than are mothers who do not breastfeed," they wrote.

Fortified cow's milk is an important source of calcium and vitamin D -- key to preventing rickets and osteoporosis -- but a second study in the same journal proposed that orange juice could substitute.

Dr. Michael Holick and colleagues at Boston University School of Medicine found that adults who drank orange juice fortified with vitamin D absorbed it just as well as from milk.

Orange juice is already available fortified with calcium.
post #2 of 10

sweet



i wish more ppl would read articles like this

i sent a TON of stuff to my mom and sisters a few months ago just to prepare them and to get them off my case b4 baby #1 even gets here...the funny thing is our religion (islam) says u must breastfeed for at least 2 full years, but my family is really maintstream for the most part and think it's 'gross'...: sigh..what can u do
post #3 of 10
Thread Starter 
How interesting. A bit off topic but is breastfeeding considered part of Sharia? The law?

Denny
post #4 of 10

mmm...i guess u could say that...

mothers are commanded by God to nurse their children for 2 complete years..it's in the Qur'an as well as in the Sunnah which are the ways of the Prophet Mohammed (God's peace and blessings be upon him), as well as commands that God revealed to him to tell the people..it is a RIGHT of the child and we are not allowed to take it away for no good reason, just like men and women have their rights, children have theirs..

of course, it does not go to the extent that u'd be punished if u *couldnt* breastfeed for medical reasons or otherwise, but it's so important that even in those cases you should try to find someone who can nurse your child since we know it is the best food for the baby ...

there is this one beautiful tradition from the Sunnah that i just love...when the Prophet Mohammed's (God's peace and blessings be upon him) son Ibrahim died he was 1yr and 10 months old--just to show you how important it is to complete those 2 years-- he said 'Ibrahim has a wet-nurse in paradise' since his little boy didnt get to use up his right as a child in the present world..

sorry if i ruined the thread
post #5 of 10
Thread Starter 
No you did not ruin the thread! That is so beautiful! I should go back and read more of the Qur'an. There is great beauty in it.

Denny
post #6 of 10
nak...dh is studying judaism and said the same "rule" is in the torah. 2 yeas minimum and 5 if the child is "sickly". cool, huh?
post #7 of 10
Thread Starter 
Most cool.
post #8 of 10
So for those of you who were formula fed, when you read articles like this do you get upset you weren't breastfed? I kind of do! I hope that it isn't that breastfeeding moms encourage better eating habits in their children--I haven't been so great on that score lately!
post #9 of 10
i do get a little sad, amywillow! my mom wanted to nurse her first baby, but HER MOTHER tolde her it was "dirty" so none of us got any nursing. i always wonder if maybe we had been nursed, if our teeth wouldn't have been so f^%$# up, and maybe my mom would not have been pregnant 10 times in 13 years so maybe she wouldn't have been so depressed and mean to us. so many "ifs" you know?
all i can do is try and reverse that with shoshanna.
post #10 of 10
Thread Starter 
I have many allergies and that is something I definitely blame formula for. Milk, respiratory and wheat allergies. I am also nearsighted as is my formula fed sister. Possibly linked to formula.

Oh well. My kid won't have some of this. I hope.

Denny
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