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Press Release
David Goodman,
Ph.D,
For eighteen years, newborn babies have been
fed by infant formula high in the toxic metal manganese. Common
sense teaches that a brain-damaging substance cannot be fed by bottle
to our most vulnerable citizens. Yet research ongoing for a decade
at two University of California campuses affirms that manganese
in infant formula may damage the infant brain and trigger aberrant
behavior in adolescents.
This week's INSIGHT MAGAZINE ONLINE (www.insightmag.com)
in a special report by David Goodman affirms that the soy infant
formula currently on shelves permits an estimated safe manganese
dose of 0.6 mgs. about 120 times the amount found in mother's milk.
Excess manganese that the baby cannot metabolize is stored in body
organs, about eight percent in the brain, in proximity to dopamine-bearing
neurons responsible, in part, for adolescent neurological development.
Under the direction of Carl Keen, Ph.D. and
Bo Lonnerdahl, Ph.D. at UC Davis and Frank Crinella, Ph.D. and Louis
Gottschalk, MD, Ph.D. at UC Irvine, UC professors have tracked migration
of manganese from the digestive track to the brain, in particular
to nerve cells in the basal ganglia bearing the neurotransmitter
dopamine. Evidence for damage to these critical basal ganglia cells
active during adolescence in rats was reported at a Fall 2000 conference
at UCI by Dr. Francis Crinella and Trin Tranh, has been replicated
this month at the UC Davis laboratories.
The implications are that the one of eight infants
during the first six months of life given soy formula may be at
risk for brain and behavioral disorders not evident until adolescence,
a charge denied by the soy industry. Highly suggestive, the results
of brain damage from soy infant formula cannot yet be accepted as
applicable to human infants until further lab studies are carried
out in the laboratory on primates, and epidemiological studies on
human children. Nonetheless, the findings remain provocative and
should be widely discussed, especially since thousands of poor mothers
receive soy formula from the government-funded WIC program.
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