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This is why Breast milk is Irreplaceable

Thursday, April 21, 2016 8:27
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At first glance, breast milk may seem like any other food, especially nutritious, perhaps, or better adapted to the needs of the baby, but little else. However, this perception is wrong. Over millions of years of evolution, breast milk has been refined to also become a staple food. It is the way the mother transmits her baby  critical tools for survival. Breastfeeding reduces infant mortality and infections and has been linked to a lower risk of obesity. Health benefits also reach the mother, whom breastfeeding protects against breast cancer. The importance of breast milk in human development makes an interesting element of study, but its complexity has not allowed scientists to unravel its secrets. “Breast milk is so complex and so rich in bioactive factors such as proteins that stimulate the immune system, antimicrobial proteins, antibodies and others, that it can not be replaced with any artificial version of it,” explains Thierry Hennet, researcher at the Institute of Physiology at the University Zurich. Hennet, who has just published a review of efforts to understand the role that breast milk plays in raising a healthy child, adds that “production of an infant formula that includes all the constituents of breast milk would be so expensive that no one could afford it.” At first, each breast produces, on average, 450 grams of milk daily. Fifteen months later, depending on how often you breastfeed, the daily output can reach 200 grams. It also changes its composition. One of the basic functions of breast milk is to build the baby’s immune system. This task was described in 1903 and was linked to the presence of antibodies in the milk. Now it is also known that the amount of maternal antibodies is much higher during the first month of baby’s life. Then, when the child has already begun to build their own defenses, the percentage of maternal antibodies in milk falls 90%. The complexity to which Hennet refer to may be associated with more than 200 different sugar molecules found in human milk, well above the 50 that can be found in cow’s milk. Although it is not known precisely what role these sugars play, it is believed that one of its functions is to feed the bacteria that must colonize the intestine of the baby, who is born without these microorganisms that will determine much of his future health. All these benefits for child health have made the World Health Organization recommend that the baby feeds from the breast of his mother during the first six months of life, and then for at least a year to supplement solid food. From there, if you want to and can continue, it is even better. From the scientific point of view, the superiority of breastfeeding is overwhelming, but between the 1950s and 1990s there was a strong influence of the dairy industry, which promoted artificial milk as an ideal substitute. That cannot be further from the truth. “Despite all the benefits we know that originate from breastfeeding and of prolonged breastfeeding, it is very difficult and requires a lot of support from society,” says Hennet. “Although they are improving artificial milk, which is achieved by artificially synthesizing many of its components, its value is in the overall composition, the interaction of its components, and even genetics and microbial flora of the mother,” he adds. Despite emphasizing that evidence continues to accumulate about the positive results of the breastfeeding, Hennet’s article also draws attention to some risks. Some contaminants present in the environment can accumulate in the breast tissue of women and be transmitted to children. The milk itself may be contaminated with substances ingested by the mother during pregnancy. This is why, women looking into getting pregnant must do a complete body cleanse and spend a lot of time preparing their bodies to conceive the child. The bad news is that not all women are ready  to be mothers. The good news is that most women can actually prepare for it. Scientific studies have found enough evidence between chemical compounds used in plastics and textiles in breast milk and altered sex hormone levels in babies as young as three months,” says Hennet. According to Hennet, the work of scientists to control this risk is to identify contaminants, to remove them from industrial processes and thus the environment and our bodies. Hennet concludes his work recognizing that regardless of the biological virtues of breastfeeding, it is not a responsibility of scientists to decide how long should a mother breastfeed. Those decisions, he says, “are a responsibility of the families.”

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