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Ovulation calendar and pregnancy
Reduced
Fertility In Women Linked To Low Fat
Dairy Food
Main Category:
Fertility News
A new US study suggests that eating low fat dairy food every day
can reduce a woman's
fertility by affecting
ovulation.
The study is published in the journal Human Reproduction.
Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health and Brigham and
Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, followed
18,555 married, premenopausal women aged between 24 and 42, with
no history of
infertility, who were either trying to become
pregnant or became pregnant over an 8 year period from 1991 to
1999.
The study was led by Dr Jorge Chavarro, a research fellow in the
Department of Nutrition at Harvard School of Public Health.
The women were part of a cohort of 116,000 women in The Nurses'
Health Study II.
Their dietover the 8 years was assessed with questions about
type and frequency of dairy food intake. They were also asked
questions about the regularity of their menstrual cycle, whether
they had been diagnosed with
ovulation failure, and whether they
had been trying to conceive and with what success.
ovulation
438 women reported
ovulatory disorders during the period of the
study.
The study showed that women who ate more than two portions a day
of low fat dairy foods were 85 per cent more likely to be
infertile due to ovulatory disorders than those who only ate it
less than once a week.
Conversely they found that women who ate full-fat dairy foods,
including ice cream, more than once per day had a 25 per cent
reduced risk of in
fertility due to ovulatory disorders compared
to those who ate full-fat dairy foods only once a
ovulation week.
Previous studies have suggested that dairy foods can interfere
with
ovulation, but few of them have been on humans and they are
inconsistent. The researchers in this study wanted to assess to
what extent the fat content of dairy foods in a woman's diet
might be linked to infertility due to
ovulation disorders.
Dr Chavarro's advice to women trying to conceive is to change
their diet for a while. He said "They should consider changing
low-fat dairy foods for high-fat dairy foods; for instance, by
swapping skimmed milk for whole milk and eating ice cream, not
low fat yoghurt."
But it was important to do this without increasing their daily
calorie intake or upsetting the balance of overall saturated fat
consumption, he said.
"Once they have become
pregnant, then they should probably
switch back to low-fat dairy foods as it is easier to limit
intake of saturated fat by consuming low-fat dairy foods," said
Dr Chavarro.
The researchers suggest that a fat-soluble substance in the
full-fat dairy foods could be responsible for improved ovarian
function, and that this substance is removed when full-fat dairy
produce is converted to low-fat.
There could be other reasons too, to do with hormone balance.
For instance, when full-fat milk is processed to give skimmed
milk, whey protein is usually added back in to improve taste and
colour. In tests with mice, whey protein is suspected of
increasing testosterone-like effects.
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