On May 30, 1:26�am, Tom Hendricks <
tom-hendri...@att.net> wrote:
> Why would natural selection lead to Lysozyme, an antiseptic found in breast milk, to peak in
> concentration from 6-15 months IF, like most doctors advise, mothers should stop breast feeding
> after 6 months?
You may have misunderstood something. Here is what one website, by
the La Leche League quotes in that connection:
The American Academy of Pediatrics currently (2005) recommends:
"Pediatricians and parents should be aware that exclusive
breastfeeding is sufficient to support optimal growth and development
for approximately the first 6 months of life and provides continuing
protection against diarrhea and respiratory tract infection.
Breastfeeding should be continued for at least the first year of life
and beyond for as long as mutually desired by mother and child."*
*See
http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/pediatrics;115/2/496
excerpted from:
http://www.llli.org/faq/bflength.html
Note the distinction between "exclusive breastfeeding" in the first
sentence and "Breastfeeding" in the second.
>That makes no sense from a evolutionary view point does it?
>
> See the concentration of - Immunologic Components in Human Milk - chart.
> Note the increase of Lysozyme peaking from 6-15 months. �If true why would
> people recommend ending breastfeeding at 6 months before the peak period. That would miss all the Lysozyme benefits.
> Definition Lysozyme, " an enzyme with antiseptic actions that destroys some foreign organisms. It is found in granulocytic and monocytic blood cells and is normally present in saliva, sweat, breast milk, and tears."
>
> Also note the 50 chemicals found in breast milk - these are not in formula.
>
>
http://kellymom.com/nutrition/milk/immunefactors/
>
>
http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/lysozyme
>
> Tom Hendricks
>
> BIO:
http://wp.me/p5S9X-eOBIOLOGY HYPOTHESIS
>
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/U/UV_origin_of_life.html(UV paper)
> Catabolic and Anabolic evolved, but they did not blend.
You are in agreement with La Leche, whose webpage goes on to say [not
quoting from the AAP any more]:
All the benefits of human milk�including nutritional and
health�continue for as long as your baby receives your milk. In fact,
as your baby takes less human milk, these advantages are condensed
into what milk is produced. Many of the health benefits of human milk
are dose related, that is, the longer the baby receives human milk,
the greater are the benefits.
http://www.llli.org/faq/bflength.html
Peter Nyikos
Professor, Dept. of Mathematics -- standard disclaimer--
University of South Carolina
http://www.math.sc.edu/~nyikos/
nyikos @
math.sc.edu