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Vegan Talk Topic - Low-Fat Dairy Products Linked to Infertility in Women

 
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BigBecka
Animal defender


Joined: 02 Dec 2006
Posts: 414

Posted: Mar 1, 2007 8:53 pm    Post subject: Low-Fat Dairy Products Linked to Infertility in Women Reply with quote

I thought the following was interesting Unfortunately, the study compared women who ate low-fat dairy regularly, and those who ate high-fat dairy occasionally: there is no mention of women who ate no dairy at all!

I think it could be interesting to know whether it is low-fat dairy that causes this form of infertility, or high-fat dairy that prevents it. The article suggests the latter, without investigating the hypothesis that the total amount of dairy consumed may be to blame. Or other factors, such as the women's weight, or the fact that being on a strict low-fat diet may be causing stress.

Quote:
Low-fat food is ‘bad for you’

Women who consume low-fat milk and yoghurt may find it harder to become pregnant, a new study has found.

A team at Harvard School of Public Health found that women who eat a lot of low-fat dairy foods were 85 per cent more likely to suffer from a failure to ovulate.

Women who had a least one serving a day of a high-fat dairy food were 27 per cent less likely to suffer from this form of infertility than were those who consumed high-fat dairy food only once a week.

The finding suggests that the obsession with low-fat foods, driven by nutritionists trying to protect against heart disease and by consumers trying to lose weight, may have a downside.

Anovulatory infertility — the type studied here — is just one of a variety of ways in which infertility can be caused. In the population studied, it was responsible for one in eight cases of a failure to conceive.

The data comes from the Nurses’ Study, a long-running research project in the US that draws comparisons between diet and lifestyle and medical history.

A team led by Jorge Chavarro of the Department of Nutrition at Harvard and colleagues used a subset of more than 18,000 married nurses from the study who had either become pregnant or attempted to do so during an eight-year period in the 1990s. Their success, or lack of it, was compared with their dietary habits, which had been recorded several years earlier. There were 3,430 cases of infertility, of which 438 were identified as having been caused by a failure to ovulate.

By comparing the diet of these women with that of women who conceived successfully, the team were able to draw their conclusions.

The scientists, whose work is published in Human Reproduction, say that the total intake of dairy foods shows no link with anovulatory infertility. But when high-fat and low-fat dairy foods were considered separately, a difference emerged.

Women consuming at least five portions week of low-fat foods had a higher than average risk of being infertile. If women ate two or more servings of low-fat dairy foods a day, they increased their risk of ovulation-related infertility by more than four fifths (85 per cent) compared with women who ate less than one serving of low-fat dairy food a week.

And if women ate at least one serving of high-fat dairy food a day, they reduced their risk by more than a quarter (27 per cent) compared with women who consumed one or fewer high-fat dairy servings a week. High-fat foods include ice-cream and whole milk.

Dr Chavarro said that his advice to women wanting to conceive would be to change their diet. “They should consider changing low-fat dairy foods for high-fat dairy foods; for instance, by swapping skimmed milk for whole milk and eating ice-cream, not low-fat yoghurt.”

But he added that it was important that women did this within the constraints of maintaining their normal calorie intake and limiting saturated fats. He said that once they are pregnant “they should probably switch back to low-fat dairy foods as it is easier to limit intake of saturated fat by consuming low-fat dairy foods”.

Just why low-fat dairy foods should have this effect is not yet clear. High-fat dairy products have a higher concentration of the female sex hormone oestrogen than do their low-fat counterparts. Alternatively, greater insulin sensitivity among high-fat dairy consumers may improve ovulatory function.

“Given the scarcity of studies in this area, it is important that our studies are confirmed or refuted,” the team said.

Dr Chavarro added: “Clarifying the role of dairy foods intake on fertility is particularly important since the current dietary guidelines for Americans recommend that adults consume three or more daily servings of low-fat milk or equivalent dairy products.

“This is a strategy that may well be deleterious for women planning to become pregnant as it would give them an 85 per cent higher risk of anovulatory infertility.”

Falling intake

1,126m

Litres of whole-fat milk sold

2,761m

Litres of semi-skimmed sold

740m

Litres of skimmed (fat-free) milk sold

8%

Rate at which sales of whole-fat milk are falling

Source: Dairy UK

Nigel Hawkes, Health Editor, The Times, Wednesday 28 February 2007, www.timesonline.co.uk
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AndyBa
Lord of the posts


Joined: 27 May 2001
Posts: 670

Posted: Mar 3, 2007 9:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

It could also be that women who ate low fat diary were more concerned about having a slim body then having a baby. Or even were afraid of having babies. The brain can really do miracles sometime, and give you what you wish.

Or may be women who ate low fat diary were eating higher quantities of it, to stay full.

Or may be when the fat is removed from diary products something BAD happens to it.


Anyway I don't consider diary to be a healthy food, at least that is my experience.

....Just my thoughts
_________________
Andy`Ba

The human body has no more need for cows' milk than it does for dogs' milk, horses' milk, or giraffes' milk. ~Michael Klaper, M.D., author of Vegan Nutrition: Pure & Simple
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