Breast Milk

Breast Milk - most related articles:

- Copper inhibits transmission of hiv through breast milk and blood - 5.9
- ANMUM Materna prenatal milk recalled from China - 5.3
- Protein hydrolysate based infant formulas found better - 5
- Breastfeeding for up to 6 months after birth may prevent asthma - 4.8
- Antidepressant drugs may lead to lactation difficulties in moms - 4.5
- Drinking milk during pregnancy lowers baby's risk of multiple sclerosis - 4.5
- Environmental chemicals in breast milk may cause testicular cancer later - 4.4
- New treatment with omalizumab may desensitize kids with milk allergies - 4.2
- Combined hormone therapy increases lobular breast cancer risk - 4.1
- Less hormone therapy use in women reduced breast cancer rate - 3.8

Breast Milk articles

U.S. hospitals do not fully support breastfeeding
Breastfeeding protects against childhood obesity, yet less than 4 percent of U.S. hospitals provide the full range of support mothers need to be able to breastfeed, according to the most recent Vital Signs report released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Breastfeeding for up to 6 months after birth may prevent asthma
Children who had never been breastfed had an increased risk of wheezing, shortness of breath, dry cough and persistent phlegm during their first 4 years, compared to children who were breastfed for more than 6 months, revealed by researchers.

Environmental chemicals in breast milk may cause testicular cancer later
A comparison of breast milk samples from Denmark and Finland revealed a significant difference in environmental chemicals which have previously been implicated in testicular cancer or in adversely affecting development of the fetal testis in humans and animals.

Copper inhibits transmission of hiv through breast milk and blood
Researchers from the U.S. and abroad have developed an inexpensive copper-based filter that may prevent HIV from being passed through breast milk and blood. They report their findings in the February 2008 issue of the journal Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy.

Breastfeeding safer for infants of HIV mothers with Nevirapine
An antiretroviral drug already in widespread use in the developing world to prevent the transmission of HIV from infected mothers to their newborns during childbirth has also been found to substantially cut the risk of subsequent HIV transmission during breast-feeding.

5 Breast Milk articles listed above.


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