Infant Nutrition Advice El Reno OK

Some babies aren't born with baby fat—they get it from a bottle. Or so a growing number of studies suggest. Advocates of breastfeeding have long suspected that bottle-fed babies face a greater risk of obesity later in life than their breastfed nurserymates do. Now researchers seeking to understand the ever-expanding obesity epidemic have found evidence that they're right.

Diane Clayton
405-948-4900
4913 W Reno Ave
Oklahoma City, OK
Performance Nutrition
405-265-0847
1721 S Morgan Rd
Oklahoma City, OK
Nutrititon Specialists PC
(405) 603-1941
5601 NW. 72nd Street
Oklahoma City, OK
Antony Don Anderson, MD
405-422-3177
1801 Parkview Dr
El Reno, OK
James D Lackey
(405) 717-5496
1205 Health Center Pkwy
Yukon, OK
JuliAnn Marzuola
405-848-1992
PENN PARK 5009 N. Pennsylvania Avenue, Suite 114, Oklahoma City, OK
Oklahoma City, OK
Nutrition Specialists PC
(405) 603-1941
5601 NW 72nd St
Warr Acres, OK
Vladimir Holy
(405) 422-6337
2315 Parkview Drive
El Reno, OK
James David Lackey, MD
405-717-5496
1205 Health Center Pkwy Ste 240
Yukon, OK
Shawnaree L Beeson
(405) 717-7820
1205 Health Center Pkwy
Yukon, OK
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Baby Fat in a Bottle

Some babies aren’t born with baby fat—they get it from a bottle. Or so a growing number of studies suggest. Advocates of breastfeeding have long suspected that bottle-fed babies face a greater risk of obesity later in life than their breastfed nurserymates do. Now researchers seeking to understand the ever-expanding obesity epidemic have found evidence that they’re right. At a recent conference sponsored by both the University of California at Berkeley’s Center for Weight and Health and the California Department of Health Services, experts analyzed data from studies worldwide. The most compelling research came from Scottish scientists at the University of Glasgow and Glasgow Caledonian University. They studied 32,200 Scottish children and found that those who were breastfed during infancy were 30 percent less likely to become obese as children. How to account for the findings? One possibility is that breastfed babies are better “programmed” against overeating later in life, because parents who use bottles tend to overfeed. Babies fed on breast milk have also recently been shown to have lower levels of leptin, a protein associated with obesity, than formula-fed infants. And some suspect that because most infant formula is made with sucrose rather than lactose (the natural sugar in breast milk), bottle-fed babies may be more likely to develop a preference for processed sugar. To be sure, no one is suggesting that breastfeeding is a magic bullet against obesity: All sorts of environmental and genetic factors contribute to the tendency to put on pounds. But the mounting evidence of the effects of infant nutrition is hard to ignore.

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