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Dairy Product Tied To Having Twins
A diet high in dairy products can greatly increase
a woman's chances of having twins, research suggests.
A study in the Journal of Reproductive Medicine
showed milk drinkers were five times more likely to have twins
than women who ate no animal products.
The numbers of twins in the world has increased
significantly in the past 30 years, in some countries by over
50%.
Scientists have suggested fertility treatments
and women delaying pregnancy can help explain the rise.
But this new research indicates that diet can
also play an important part.
Ovaries stimulated
In the study, the twinning rates of women who
ate a diet including milk were compared with women who followed
a vegan, or no animal products diet.
It is believed that a protein found in the livers
of animals may be the cause. Called Insulin-like Growth Factor
or IGF, it is found in cow's milk and other animal products.
In women it makes the ovaries more sensitive
and increases the number of eggs produced. Higher levels of IGF
improve the survival chances of an embryo in the early stages
of development.
The effect is likely to be greater in countries
such as the United States that allow growth hormones to be fed
to cattle.
The researcher behind this study says that women
thinking of getting pregnant might consider alternatives to meat
and dairy products to reduce their chances of having twins, as
multiple births are more prone to complications.
Reference
Source 108
May
31, 2006
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