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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday January 25 2020, @02:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the it-does-a-body-good-(in-small-doses) dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

[...]Research on 5,834 U.S. adults by Brigham Young University exercise science professor Larry Tucker, Ph.D., found people who drink low-fat milk experience several years less biological aging than those who drink high-fat (2% and whole) milk.

[...]Tucker investigated the relationship between telomere length and both milk intake frequency (daily drinkers vs. weekly drinkers or less) and milk fat content consumed (whole vs. 2% vs. 1% vs. skim). Telomeres are the nucleotide endcaps of human chromosomes. They act like a biological clock and they're extremely correlated with age; each time a cell replicates, humans lose a tiny bit of the endcaps. Therefore, the older people get, the shorter their telomeres.

And, apparently, the more high-fat milk people drink, the shorter their telomeres are, according to the new BYU study, published in Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity. The study revealed that for every 1% increase in milk fat consumed (drinking 2% vs. 1% milk), telomeres were 69 base pairs shorter in the adults studied, which translated into more than four years in additional biological aging. When Tucker analyzed the extremes of milk drinkers, adults who consumed whole milk had telomeres that were a striking 145 base pairs shorter than non-fat milk drinkers.

-- submitted from IRC

Larry A. Tucker. Milk Fat Intake and Telomere Length in U.S. Women and Men: The Role of the Milk Fat Fraction. Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity, 2019; 2019: 1 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1574021


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  • (Score: 5, Interesting) by Arik on Saturday January 25 2020, @05:41PM (4 children)

    by Arik (4543) on Saturday January 25 2020, @05:41PM (#948511) Journal
    That's interesting, where in Asia?

    The other poster may be somewhat on the right track, gut bacteria is the other major factor that gets overlooked.

    As far as I understand it, virtually no one in Japan is able to digest lactose (lack the milk drinking gene) yet they consume quite a bit of dairy with no apparent symptoms. As far as I understand it, that's supposed to be down to their gut bacteria *also* being unable to digest lactose, so it simply passes through untouched.

    You only get symptoms if you can't digest the lactose yourself, but your gut bacteria can. It's their subsequent excretion that causes the symptoms. So it makes sense you might have been not digesting the whole time, but the antibiotics caused catastrophe in your gut bacteria and this somehow caused you to start experiencing symptoms.
    --
    If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
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  • (Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 25 2020, @06:02PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 25 2020, @06:02PM (#948526)

    It was mainland China and for that year I hardly even saw butter. There was a near complete lack of any dairy products, even finding butter was often an issue in some of those small towns. The only butter I could find would usually be in those little packets. I could generally get soft serve ice cream and apple milk. (Actually pretty tasty)

    My suspicion has been that it's the wrong mix of bacteria. I had a great deal of luck by introducing massive amounts of bacteria back into the body via live culture yogurt including strains that are known to digest lactose in a less problematic way, but the amount it took was a lot and I haven't been able to figure out an appropriate mix or schedule to make it self sustaining. I was eating about a gallon of live culture yogurt a week to see much effect and at that point, it was unclear whether it was just extra lactase from the bacteria or if some had set up shop in my digestive track.

    • (Score: 2) by Arik on Saturday January 25 2020, @06:11PM

      by Arik (4543) on Saturday January 25 2020, @06:11PM (#948532) Journal
      That's very interesting, as you say, dairy is not commonly seen in mainland China. So you wouldn't *expect* the gut bacteria one would pick up there to digest lactase - but of course that's just a probabilistic sort of guess, reality doesn't always coƶperate with those.
      --
      If laughter is the best medicine, who are the best doctors?
  • (Score: 2, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 25 2020, @08:37PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday January 25 2020, @08:37PM (#948598)

    Even people who can digest lactose can be lactose intolerant depending on their gut bacteria.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 28 2020, @02:05AM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 28 2020, @02:05AM (#949742)

      Who upvoted this?! This is the most anti-intellectual comment in the thread...