Guest guest Posted February 27, 2006 Report Share Posted February 27, 2006 Hi - So glad to hear you are making a good recovery from your bout with appendicitis. My question for you today: What form of whey protein are you using? Where do you buy it? Etc.... Please give us the details. Thanks! JamiGoldWing 271/158 > > > > Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 2002 Jul;42(4):353-75. Related > Articles, Links > > > > Whey components: millennia of evolution create functionalities > for > > mammalian nutrition: what we know and what we may be overlooking. > > > > Walzem RL, Dillard CJ, German JB. > > > > Faculty of Nutrition, Texas A & M University, College Station > 77843, > > USA. > > > > Nutrition is undergoing a revolution owing to the recognition > that some > > foods contain trophic, health-promoting factors distinct from > essential > > nutrients. In this revolution, whey is increasingly being viewed as > more > > than a source of proteins with a particularly nutritious > composition of > > essential amino acids. Milk evolved under continuous Darwinian > selection > > pressure to nourish mammalian neonates. Evolutionary pressure > appears to > > have led to the elaboration of a complex food that contains > proteins, > > peptides, complex lipids, and oligosaccharides that act as growth > factors, > > toxin-binding factors, antimicrobial peptides, prebiotics, and > immune > > regulatory factors within the mammalian intestine. Importantly, > these > > trophic macromolecules are not essential, although the health > benefits that > > their biological activities within the intestine provide likely > contributed > > to neonatal survival. Human and bovine milks contain many homologous > > components, and bovine whey may prove to be a source for molecules > capable > > of providing biological activities to humans when consumed as food > > ingredients. To approach this potential, food and nutrition > research must > > move beyond the description of food ingredients as delivering only > essential > > nutrients and develop a mechanistic understanding of the > interactions > > between dietary components and the metabolic and physiological > properties of > > the intestine. > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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