Researchers Find Method To Reduce Lactose Intolerant Symptoms
Posted: Saturday, April 24, 2010
by Al Jeffries
http://www.a1-allergies.com
Millions of people in the country are lactose intolerant or have digestive problems when they drink milk. If you child is one of these people, by heating the milk, she may be able to drink it without experiencing the normal signs usually associated with lactose intolerance.
This data is originating from a recent report in the Allergy and Clinical Immunology publication. As reported in the research article, when normal milk was heated and provided to kids who had cow milk allergies, three of four of them no longer exhibited allergy symptoms. Under normal situations, when a milk allergy sensitive child drinks milk, his antibodies go into action to attack the milk proteins. This is what causes the allergy symptoms. The theory is that when milk is treated past a specified temperature, the heat destroys the milk proteins that normally trigger the allergy symptoms.
Today, if a person with milk allergies wants to drink milk - he does have options. Their options usually come down to some variation of the following four options: 1) They could do what quite a few people do and simply avoid milk products. 2) They could drink milk and then suffer the results of bloating, cramps, upset stomach, diarrhea, and so on. 3) They could orally take food enzymes that enable them to pre-digest the milk proteins. 4) They could purchase the more expensive milk that have milk enzymes added to them.
We should, of course, mention that there are many people in the health field who think that humans have no business drinking milk from a cow. And, what they suggest is that if you really desire the taste of a milk like product that you try one of the many substitutes on the market such as soy milk, nut milk, rice milk and the like. For those that do want cow's milk, however, the study could provide them with new food choices.
The thinking of heath experts has long been that if a person had milk allergies, it didn't really matter whether the milk was cold, warm, hot, or whatever. At the very least the study forces researchers to rethink some of their earliest assumptions about milk allergies and how to handle them.
And, even though this particular milk study was relatively tiny, consisting of just a hundred children, if larger follow up studies show the same results, an entire new class of products could hit the market targeted at the millions of people who are lactose intolerant but who love to drink milk.
But that could be only the tip of the iceberg. This study could also lead to entirely new ways of managing and controlling lactose intolerance in both adults and children.
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