WHAT'S WRONG WITH DAIRY PRODUCTS? . .
.
by PCRM
Many Americans, including some vegetarians,
still consume large amounts of dairy products. Here are
eight great reasons to eliminate dairy products rom
your diet.
1. Osteoporosis
Milk is
touted for preventing osteoporosis, yet clinical research
shows otherwise. The Harvard Nurses’ Health Study,1
which followed more than 75,000 women for 12 years,
showed no protective effect of increased milk consumption
on fracture risk. In fact, increased intake of calcium
from dairy products was associated with a higher
fracture risk. An Australian study2 showed the same
results. Additionally, other studies3,4
have also found no protective effect of dairy calcium
on bone. You can decrease your risk of osteoporosis
by reducing sodium and animal protein intake in the diet,5-7
increasing intake of fruits and vegetables,8 exercising,9
and ensuring adequate calcium intake from plant foods such
as leafy green vegetables and beans, as well as calcium-fortified
products such as breakfast cereals and juices
2. Cardiovascular
Disease
Dairy products—including cheese,
ice cream, milk, butter, and yogurt—contribute significant
amounts of cholesterol and fat to the diet.10 Diets
high in fat and saturated
fat can increase the risk of several chronic
diseases including cardiovascular disease. A
low-fat vegetarian diet that eliminates dairy products,
in combination with exercise, smoking cessation, and stress
management, can not only prevent heart disease, but may
also reverse it.11 Non-fat dairy products are available,
however, they pose other health risks as noted below.
3. Cancer
Several
cancers, such as ovarian cancer, have been linked to
the consumption of dairy products. The milk sugar
lactose is broken down in the body into another
sugar, galactose. In turn, galactose is broken down
further by enzymes. According to a study by Daniel
Cramer, M.D., and his colleagues at Harvard,12 when
dairy product consumption exceeds the enzymes’ capacity
to break down galactose, it can build up in the blood
and may affect a woman’s ovaries. Some women have
particularly low levels of these enzymes,
and when they consume dairy products on a regular basis,
their risk of ovarian cancer can be triple that of
other women. Breast and prostate cancers have also
been linked to consumption of dairy products, presumably
related, at least in part, to increases in
a compound called insulin-like growth factor(IGF-I).13-15
IGF-I is found in cow’s milk and has been shown to
occur in increased levels in the blood by individuals
consuming dairy products on a regular basis.16 Other
nutrients that increase IGF-I are also found
in cow’s milk. A recent study showed that men who had
the highest levels of IGF-I had more than four times
the risk of prostate cancer compared with those who
had the lowest levels.14
4. Diabetes
Insulin-dependent
diabetes (Type I or childhood-onset) is linked to consumption
of dairy products.
Epidemiological studies of various countries
show a strong correlation between the use of dairy
products and the incidence of insulindependent diabetes.17,18
Researchers in 199218 found that a specific dairy protein
sparks an auto-immune reaction, which is believed to
be what destroys the insulin-producing cells of the
pancreas.
5. Lactose Intolerance
Lactose
intolerance is common among many populations, affecting
approximately 95 percent
of Asian Americans, 74 percent of
Native Americans, 70 percent of African
Americans, 53 percent of Mexican
Americans, and 15 percent of Caucasians.19
Symptoms, which include gastrointestinal distress, diarrhea,
and flatulence, occur because these individuals do not
have the enzymes that digest the milk sugar lactose. Additionally,
along with unwanted symptoms, milkdrinkers are also putting
themselves at risk for development of other chronic diseases
and ailments.
6. Vitamin D Toxicity
Consumption
of milk may not provide a consistent and reliable source
of vitamin D in the diet. Samplings of milk have found
significant variation in vitamin D content, with some
samplings having had as much as 500 times the indicated
level, while others had little or none at all.20,21
Too much vitamin D can be toxic and may result in excess
calcium levels in the blood and urine, increased aluminum
absorption in the body, and calcium deposits in soft
tissue.
7. Contaminants
Synthetic
hormones such as recombinant bovine growth hormone
(rBGH) are commonly used in dairy cows to increase
the production of milk.13 Because the cows are producing
quantities of milk nature never intended, the end result
is mastitis, or inflammation of the mammary glands.
The treatment requires the use of antibiotics,
and traces of these and hormones have been found in
samples of milk and other dairy
products. Pesticides and other drugs are also frequent
contaminants of dairy products.
8. Health Concerns
Of Infants And Children
Milk proteins,
milk sugar, fat, and saturated fat in dairy products
may pose health risks for children
and lead to the development of chronic diseases
such as obesity, diabetes, and formation of athersclerotic
plaques that can lead to heart disease. The American
Academy of Pediatrics recommends that infants below
one year of age not be given whole cow’s milk, as iron
deficiency is more likely on a dairy-rich diet. Cow’s
milk
products are very low in iron. If they become
a major part of one’s diet, iron deficiency
is more likely.10 Colic is an additional concern with milk
consumption. One out of every five babies suffers from
colic. Pediatricians learned long ago that cows’ milk was
often the reason. We now know that breastfeeding mothers
can have colicky babies if the mothers are consuming cow’s
milk. The cows’ antibodies can pass through the mother’s
bloodstream into her breast milk and to the baby.22 Additionally,
food allergies appear to be common results of milk consumption,
particularly in children. A recent study23 also linked
cow’s milk consumption to chronic constipation in children.
Researchers suggest that milk consumption resulted in perianal
sores and severe pain on defecation, leading to constipation.
Milk and dairy products are not necessary in the diet and
can,
in fact, be harmful to your health. Consume a
healthful diet of grains, fruits, vegetables,
legumes, and fortified foods including cereals and juices.
These nutrient-dense foods can help you meet your calcium,
potassium, riboflavin, and vitamin D requirements with
ease—and without the health risks.
References
1.
Feskanich D, Willet WC, Stampfer MJ, Colditz GA.
Milk, dietary calcium, and bone fractures in women:
a
12-year prospective study. Am J Public
Health 1997;87:992-7.
2. Cumming RG, Klineberg RJ. Case-control
study of risk factors for hip fractures
in the elderly. Am J Epidemiol 1994;139:493-505.
3. Huang Z, Himes JH, McGovern PG. Nutrition
and subsequent hip fracture risk among
a national cohort of white women. Am J Epidemiol 1996;144:124-34.
4. Cummings SR, Nevitt MC, Browner WS,
et al. Risk factors for hip fracture in
white women. N Engl J Med 1995;332:767-73.
5. Finn SC. The skeleton crew: is calcium
enough? J Women’s Health 1998;7(1):31-6.
6. Nordin CBE. Calcium and osteoporosis.
Nutrition 1997;3(7/
8):664-86.
7. Reid DM, New SA. Nutritional influences
on bone mass. Proceed Nutr Soc 1997;56:977-87.
8. Tucker KL, Hannan MR, Chen H, Cupples
LA, Wilson PWF, Kiel DP. Potassium, magnesium,
and fruit and vegetable intakes are associated with greater
bone mineral density in elderly men and women. Am J Clin
Nutr 1999;69:727-36.
9. Prince R, Devine A, Dick I, et al. The
effects of calcium supplementation (milk
powder or tablets) and exercise on bone mineral density
in postmenopausal women. J Bone Miner Res 1995;10:1068-75.
10. Pennington JAT. Bowes and Churches
Food Values of Portions Commonly Used,
17th ed. New York: Lippincott, 1998.
11. Ornish D, Brown SE, Scherwitz LW, Billings
JH, Armstrong WT, Ports TA. Can lifestyle
changes reverse coronary heart disease? Lancet 1990;336:129-33.
12. Cramer DW, Harlow BL, Willet WC. Galactose
consumption and metabolism in relation
to the risk of ovarian cancer. Lancet 1989;2:66-71.
13. Outwater JL, Nicholson A, Barnard N.
Dairy products and breast cancer: the IGF-1,
estrogen, and bGH hypothesis. Medical Hypothesis 1997;48:453-61.
14. Chan JM, Stampfer MJ, Giovannucci E,
et al. Plasma insulin-like growth factor-1
and prostate cancer risk: a prospective study. Science
1998;279:563-5.
15. World Cancer Research Fund. Food, Nutrition,
and the Prevention of Cancer: A Global
Perspective. American Institute of Cancer Research. Washington,
D.C.: 1997.
16. Cadogan J, Eastell R, Jones N, Barker
ME. Milk intake and bone mineral acquisition
in adolescent girls: randomised, controlled intervention
trial. BMJ 1997;315:1255-60
17. Scott FW. Cow milk and insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus: is there a relationship?
Am J Clin Nutr 1990;51:489-91.
18. Karjalainen J, Martin JM, Knip M, et
al. A bovine albumin peptide as a possible
trigger of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. N Engl
J Med 1992;327:302-7.
19. Bertron P, Barnard ND, Mills M. Racial
bias in federal nutrition policy, part
I: the public health implications of variations in lactase
persistence. J Natl Med Assoc 1999;91:151-7.
20. Jacobus CH, Holick MF, Shao Q, et al.
Hypervitaminosis D associated with drinking
milk. N Engl J Med 1992;326(18):1173-7.
21. Holick MF. Vitamin D and bone health.
J Nutr 1996;126(4suppl):1159S-64S.
22. Clyne PS, Kulczycki A. Human breast
milk contains bovine IgG. Relationship
to infant colic? Pediatrics 1991;87(4):439-44.
23. Iacono G, Cavataio F, Montalto G, et
al. Intolerance of cow’s milk and chronic
constipation in children. N Engl J Med 1998;339(16):1100-4.