The jury is (still) in…
PCRM sent out information about two recent medical studies on their e-mail list:
More Evidence Links Cow’s Milk to Type 1 Diabetes
A new study adds more evidence that cow’s milk proteins trigger type 1 diabetes. Marcia Goldfarb of Anatek-EP, a protein research laboratory in Portland, Maine, reports having found antibodies to bovine beta-lactoglobulin in the serum of children with diabetes. Individuals without diabetes did not have the antibody.
Type 1 diabetes is believed to be caused when antibodies destroy the insulin-producing pancreatic cells. Several studies have suggested that cow’s milk proteins may trigger the production of these dangerous antibodies. Larger studies are currently testing this theory.
Goldfarb M. Relation of time of introduction of cow milk protein to an infant and risk of type 1 diabetes mellitus. J Proteome Research 2008;7:2165-7
I know this stuff might get boring, since all the studies seem to link the same diet to different negative results:
High Saturated Fat Diets Linked to Short, Failure-Free Survival Following Prostatectomy
A recent study showed that men who consumed a high saturated fat (HSF) diet were significantly more likely to have a biochemical failure following prostate cancer removal and a shorter biochemical-failure-free survival than men on a low saturated fat (LSF) diet. Researchers looked at 309 white patients at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center with clinically organ-confined prostate cancer who were treated only with prostatectomy. Food frequency questionnaires were compiled to reflect dietary intake one year before diagnosis. Five years after surgery, 80 percent of men who consumed an LSF diet were disease free, compared to 65 percent of men who consumed a HSF diet.
Those who consumed HSF diets were comparatively younger and had higher body mass indices at diagnosis than those with LSF diets. The top contributors to the saturated fat intake for this population were beef steak, cheese and cheese spreads, hamburgers and cheeseburgers, eggs, ice cream, and salad dressings/mayonnaise. In this study, LSF intake was on average 23.4 grams per day and HSF was 37.2 grams per day. The government recommends no more than 10 percent of calories from saturated fat.
Strom SS, Yamamura Y, Forman MR, Pettaway CA, Barrera SL, DiGiovanni J. Saturated fat intake predicts biochemical failure after prostatectomy. Int J Cancer. 2008;122:2581-2585.

May 13th, 2008 at 11:02 pm
Wait, the *low* saturated fat intake was 23.4 grams a day? That’s nuts. A Big Mac has “only” ten grams of saturated fat. I can’t believe the “healthy” group was having the equivalent of nearly two and a half Big Macs a day.