Soy
Infant Formula - Better than Breastmilk?
An estimated 25% of North American babies receive infant
formula made from processed soybeans. Parents use soy formula in the belief
that is it healthier than formula based on cows' milk. Soy promotional
material claims that soy provides complete protein that is less allergenic
than cows' milk protein. When soy infant formula first became commercially
available, manufacturers even promised that soy formula was "better than
breast milk."
Parents have a right to know how these extravagant claims
compare to scientific findings related to soy infant formula.
While soybeans are relatively high in protein compared
to other legumes, scientists have long recognized them as a poor source
of protein because other proteins found in soybeans act as potent enzyme
inhibitors. These "antinutrients" block the action of trypsin and other
enzymes needed for protein digestion. In test animals, diets high in trypsin
inhibitors depress growth and cause enlargement and pathological conditions
of the pancreas, including cancer.
The soy industry recognizes that trypsin inhibitors are
a problem in infant formula and have spent millions of dollars to determine
the best way to remove them. Trypsin inhibitors are large, tightly folded
proteins that are only deactivated after a considerable period of heat
treatment. This process removes most—but not all—of the trypsin inhibitors,
but has the unfortunate side effect of over-denaturing the other proteins
in soy, particularly lysine, rendering them difficult to digest and possibly
toxic. Even in low amounts, trypsin inhibitors prevented normal growth
in rats.
The main ingredient in soy infant formula is soy protein
isolate, a powder extracted from soybeans through a process that involves
not only high temperatures but also caustic chemicals. The alkaline soaking
solution produces a carcinogen, lysinealine, and reduces the cystine content,
which is already low in the soybean. Other carcinogens called nitrosamines
are formed during high temperature spray drying.
Soybeans also contain high levels of phytic acid or phytates.
This is an organic acid, present in the outer portion of all seeds, which
blocks the uptake of essential minerals-calcium, magnesium, iron and especially
zinc-in the intestinal tract. Soybeans have very high levels of a form
of phytic acid that is particularly difficult to neutralize. As early
as 1967, researchers testing soy formula found that it caused negative
zinc balance in every infant to whom it was given. Scientists have found
a strong correlation between phytate content in formula and poor growth,
even when the diets were additionally supplemented with zinc. High amounts
of phytic acid in soy foods and grains have caused retarded growth in
children on macrobiotic diets. A reduced rate of growth is especially
serious in the infant as it causes a delay in the accumulation of lipids
in the myelin, and hence jeopardizes the development of the brain and
nervous system.
Soy formula can also cause vitamin deficiencies. Soy
increases the body's requirements for vitamin B12, a nutrient that is
absolutely vital for good health. Early studies with soy formula indicated
that soy blocks the uptake of fats. This may explain why soy seems to
increase the body's requirements for fat-soluble vitamin D.
Aluminum content of soy formula is 10 times greater than
milk based formula, and 100 times greater than unprocessed milk. Aluminum
has a toxic effect on the kidneys of infants, and has been implicated
as causing Alzheimer's in adults. Soy formulas lack cholesterol, another
nutrient that is absolutely essential for the development of the brain
and nervous system; they also lack lactose and galactose, which play an
equally important role in the development of the nervous system. A number
of other substances, which are unnecessary and of questionable safety,
are added to soy formulas including carrageenan, guar gum, sodium hydroxide
(caustic soda), potassium citrate monohydrate, tricalcium phosphate, dibasic
magnesium phosphate trihydrate, BHA and BHT.
What about the claim that soy formula is less allergenic
than cows milk formula? Studies indicate that allergies to soy are almost
as common as those to milk. Use of soy formula to treat infant diarrhea
has had mixed results, some studies showing improvement with soy formula
while others show none at all.
The most serious problem with soy formula is the presence
of phytoestrogens or isoflavones. While many claims have been made about
the health benefits of these estrogen-like compounds, animal studies indicate
that they are powerful endocrine disrupters that alter growth patterns
and cause sterility. Toxicologists estimate that an infant exclusively
fed soy formula receives the estrogenic equivalent of at least five birth
control pills per day. By contrast, almost no phytoestrogens have been
detected in dairy-based infant formula or in human milk, even when the
mother consumes soy products. A recent study found that babies fed soy-based
formula had 13,000 to 22,0000 times more isoflavones in their blood than
babies fed milk-based formula. Scientists have known for years that isoflavones
in soy products can depress thyroid function, causing autoimmune thyroid
disease and even cancer of the thyroid. But what are the effects of soy
products on the hormonal development of the infant, both male and female?
Male infants undergo a "testosterone surge" during the
first few months of life, when testosterone levels may be as high as those
of an adult male. During this period, the infant is programed to express
male characteristics after puberty, not only in the development of his
sexual organs and other masculine physical traits, but also in setting
patterns in the brain characteristic of male behavior. In monkeys, deficiency
of male hormones impairs learning and the ability to perform visual discrimination
tasks-such as would be required for reading-and retards the development
of spatial perception, which is normally more acute in men than in women.
It goes without saying that future patterns of sexual
orientation may also be influenced by the early hormonal environment.
Pediatricians are noticing greater numbers of boys whose physical maturation
is delayed, or does not occur at all, including lack of development of
the sexual organs. Learning disabilities, especially in male children,
have reached epidemic proportions. Soy infant feeding-which floods the
bloodstream with female hormones that could inhibit the effects of male
hormones-cannot be ignored as a possible cause for these tragic developments.
As for girls, an alarming number are entering puberty
much earlier than normal, according to a recent study reported in the
journal Pediatrics. Investigators found that one percent of all
girls now show signs of puberty, such as breast development or pubic hair,
before the age of three; by age eight, 14.7 percent of white girls and
a whopping 48.3 percent of African-American girls had one or both of these
characteristics. New data indicate that environmental estrogens such as
PCBs and DDE (a breakdown product of DDT) may cause early sexual development
in girls and a study in Puerto Rico implicated soy feeding as a cause
of early menarche. The use of soy formula in the WIC program, which supplies
free formula to welfare mothers, may explain the astronomical rates of
early menarche in African American girls.
The consequences are tragic. Young girls with mature
bodies must cope with feelings and urges that most children are not well-equipped
to handle. And early maturation in girls is frequently a harbinger for
problems with the reproductive system later in life including failure
to menstruate, infertility and breast cancer.
Other problems that have been anecdotally associated
with children of both sexes who were fed soy-based formula include extreme
emotional behavior, asthma, immune system problems, pituitary insufficiency,
thyroid disorders and irritable bowel syndrome.
Concerns about the dangers of soy have prompted consumer
groups in New Zealand and Canada to call for a ban on the sale of soy
infant formula. Milk-based formula contains a better protein profile and
does not flood the infant with antinutrients and female hormones. Breast
feeding is best IF the mother has consumed a healthy diet, one that is
rich in animal proteins and fats, throughout her pregnancy and continues
to do so while nursing her infant. Mothers who cannot breast feed, for
whatever reason, should prepare homemade formula based on whole milk for
their babies. The rare child allergic to whole milk formula should be
given a whole foods meat-based formula, not one made of soy protein isolate.
Parents who invest time in preparing homemade formula will be well rewarded
with the joys of conferring robust good health on their children.
For references and further information on soy foods and
soy formula, see www.soyonlineservice.co.nz
or send $12 US to Soy Alert!, PMB #106-380, 4200 Wisconsin Avenue,
NW, Washington DC 20007.
Recipes for homemade infant formula are given in Nourishing
Traditions, The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition
and the Diet Dictocrats by Sally Fallon with Mary Enig, PhD. Available
for $25 plus shipping and handling from NewTrends Publishing, Inc. (877)
707-1776, or www.newtrendspublishing.com.

© 1999 Sally Fallon. All Rights Reserved.
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