Saturday, August 13, 2011

Make Infant Formula Milk To Be Overweight

A research shows that gaining weight infants in a faster time will make the baby vulnerable to disease, ranging from heart disease to diabetes.
The study found that healthy infants who consumed infant formula fortified with protein, vitamins, and various other nutrients will have additional body fat by 22 to 38 percent when aged five to eight years than those who ate only plain bottled milk.
Researchers from England, as quoted by the Daily Mail, Thursday, believes that babies consume excessive calories and their weight increases during growth of the most crucial.
A previous study showed that 20 percent of adults who suffer from obesity caused by excess nutrients or overweight in infancy.
The mother had been warned diwanti-enriched to provide nutrients for children are underweight, if they can not give milk. Today, doctors insisted that "fatten" the baby just need to prematurely born.
"This study supports the ASI program, because the milk the baby can not have excess food," said Professor Atul Singhal of the MRC Childhood Nutrition Research Centre, University College London, who led the study.
"And the findings will also be a concern that infant formula manufacturers to further improve their products," he continued.
The researchers studied a small number of newborns in a hospital in Cambridge, Nottingham, Leicester and Glasgow.
In doing that research scientists as well as the mothers did not know which type of formula consumed by infants, whether standard or special formula milk containing various vitamins, proteins, and minerals.
In the first study, which was followed by the 299 babies born in 1993 and 1995, milk-fortified infant formula of nutrients that are consumed during the nine months.
The second study involved 246 infants born between 2003 and 2005 was stopped early because there is evidence that links between nutrient excess and obesity are found in the first study.
Britain is one country with the lowest breastfeeding rates in Europe, with an average of one in three new mothers not breast-feed her child.
Meanwhile, a previous study also suggests that infants who consume formula milk initially and then move on to solid food much faster than suggested, namely six months, will become the fastest-growing child.
Experts believe the relationship between calories ingested and body weight are very robust in infants than in older children.
Breastfeeding is believed to be associated with weight more slowly, otherwise the formula will increase the production of fat cells of the body so the baby's weight will add up fast

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