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Date: | Mon, 18 Aug 1997 15:50:48 -0400 |
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In a message dated 97-08-18 11:53:25 EDT, you write:
<< Although I don't have any research or literature to support this, I wonder
why it's so hard to believe that a baby could possibly be allergic to
breastmilk proteins. There's all sorts of people allergic to every sort
of protein imaginable - why not breastmilk proteins? Sure, most of the
time, it will be a foreign protein (cow's milk, peanut, whatever), but is
it really "impossible" to be allergic to the breastmilk protein? I always
thought any protein was capable of triggering the allergic response.
This, of course, would not be compatible with human life, in earlier
times, but that doesn't mean it can't happen.
Laurie
>>
Here is a quote from "The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding": "Protection against
allergy is one of the many advantages a baby receives from his mother's milk.
Your baby will not be allergic to your milk; you can count on this with
certainty. It is a law of nature that infants never become sensitized to
their natural food.
Proteins make the critical difference. The protein in your milk is totally
compatible with your baby. The proteins in cow's milk and in formulas based
on cow's milk are potential trouble makers for the human infant."
Kim
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