Study casts doubt on nutritional benefits of organic food

Washington, May 20 (ANI): A new research has cast doubt on the nutritional benefits of organic food by showing that wild garden birds prefer conventional seed to that which has been organically- grown.

The three-year study by Newcastle University has found that wild birds are not swayed by the organic label, but instead prefer the more protein-rich, conventional food that will help them to survive the winter.

Lead researcher Dr. Ailsa McKenzie said the findings were likely to be of “considerable interest to the general public in the debate over the relative merits of consuming organic food.”

Dr. McKenzie, based in the School of Biology at Newcastle University said: “Our results suggest that the current dogma that organic food is preferred to conventional food may not always be true. Protein is an essential nutrient in the diet of all birds and mammals and getting enough of it – especially in winter – can be hard. We showed that when given free choice, wild birds opt for the conventional food over the organic, and the most likely explanation is its higher protein content.”

To carry out the study, the Newcastle team set up feeding stations in more than 30 gardens across the North of England. Organic and non-organic wheat seeds (both of the same variety) were placed in adjacent bird feeders and then the rate at which the birds ate the different seeds was monitored over a six week period.

Half way through the experiment the feeders were swapped around. The experiment was repeated in a second winter with different wheat samples.

The birds showed a strong preference for the conventional seed, eating significantly more of this than the organic. When the feeder positions were switched, the birds learned the new position of the conventional seed and continued to select it in preference to the organic.

Analysis of the wheat found the conventionally-grown seeds to have an average 10 per cent higher protein content than the organic seeds. Other differences between the samples (e.g. in mycotoxin levels, grain size, energy content or pesticide residues) could not explain the preferences shown by the birds.

The garden bird work was confirmed by laboratory studies on canaries, also showing a significant preference for conventionally- over organically-grown seeds.

Dr. McKenzie explained: “Conventionally-grown crops tend to contain significantly higher levels of protein than those grown organically due to the application of inorganic nitrogen fertilizers in conventional farming systems. This makes our findings potentially applicable across many food types and suggests the issues surrounding organic food are not as cut and dried as some might think.”

The study has been published in the Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture. (ANI)

Iraq war ‘stunting’ children’s growth

London, March 29 (ANI): Children born in most violent areas of Iraq have been observed to be shorter than their counterparts from safer regions, say British researchers.

Boffins at Royal Holloway, University of London, examined the data from the country’s central statistics office and found “stunting” was a serious concern among those born in provinces in the south and centre of Iraq which experienced the worst violence.

Principal investigator Gabriela Guerrero-Serdan, from the department of economics, discovered under-fives from these areas were on average 0.8cm (0.3in) shorter, implying the conflict was taking a toll on children”s health.

The study further linked the short height of these children to poor quality diet and sanitation.

“The short height of these children is likely to reflect poor quality food intake, and also more disease and diarrhoea. Power failures which affected water supplies and refrigeration are likely to have added to the problem.” The BBC quoted the author as saying.

“Early life development and growth are connected and important, because children who are well-nourished are more likely to be healthy, productive and able to learn in the future,” she added.

Professor Peter Emery, head of nutrition and dietetics at King”s College London, further explained: “Stunting does not necessarily mean that the quality of the diet is low in terms of protein content. It is more likely to indicate chronically low quantity of food, together with poor sanitation and access to healthcare.”

The research was due to be presented at the Royal Economic Society annual conference. (ANI)

New crops needed in case of continued rise in CO2 levels

Washington, June 29 (ANI): A new research has determined that new crops would be needed to be grown in the future if carbon dioxide (CO2) levels continue to rise.

Global food security in a changing climate depends on the nutritional value and yield of staple food crops.

Researchers at Monash University in Victoria, Australia, have found an increase in toxic compounds, a decrease in protein content and a decreased yield in plants grown under high CO2 and drought conditions.

The research has shown that the concentration of cyanogenic glycosides, which break down to release toxic hydrogen cyanide, increased in plants in elevated CO2.

This was compounded by the fact that protein content decreased, making the plants overall more toxic as the ability of herbivores to break down cyanide depends largely on the ingestion of sufficient quantities of protein.

Data have also shown that cassava, a staple food crop in tropical and subtropical regions due to its tolerance of arid conditions, may experience yield reductions in high CO2.

Combined with an increase in cyanogenic glycosides, this has major implications for the types of crops that can be grown in the future if CO2 levels continue to rise.

“We need to be preparing for the predicted reduction in nutritional value of many plants in the coming century by developing and growing different cultivars which, for cassava in particular, may not be easy,” said Dr Gleadow. (ANI)

Drinking milk at breakfast helps you feel fuller, eat less at lunchtime

Washington, June 22 (ANI): Drinking fat free milk instead of a fruit drink at breakfast helps you feel fuller and eat less at lunchtime, according to a new study.

During the study, Australian researchers found that drinking fat free milk in the morning helped increase satiety, or a feeling of fullness, and led to decreased calorie intake at the next meal, as compared with a fruit drink.

The milk drinkers ate about 50 fewer calories (or nearly 9 percent less food) at lunch.

In the study, 34 overweight but otherwise healthy men and women participated in two testing sessions – one in which they were served about 20 ounces of fat free milk, and one in which they were served the same amount of a fruit drink (both beverages contributed about 250 calories to the breakfast meal).

During the four hours between breakfast and lunch, the men and women gauged their feelings of fullness and were allowed to eat until comfortably full at lunch.

The researchers found that the milk-drinking adults reported feeling fuller, more satisfied and therefore ate fewer calories at lunch.

The researchers suspect that milk’s protein content, the lactose or simply the thickness of the beverage may play a role in the satiety benefits.

Choosing foods that can help enhance satiety is an important success factor in any weight management plan, the researchers suggest.

The study has been published in the July issue of the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. (ANI)

Why bottle-fed babies grow faster

London, Apr 24 (ANI): Breast milk has less protein than formula, a new study has claimed.

It has been believed that formula-fed babies, who tend to be bigger, are “programmed” to store fat and so have a higher risk of childhood obesity.

Now, an international study of 1,000 babies, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, has suggested that protein levels in formula should fall.

The study, which was carried out in Belgium, Italy, Germany, Poland and Spain, included babies born between 2002 and 2004.

Parents were recruited to take part in the first few weeks of their babies’ lives, reports The BBC.

To reach the conclusion, a third were given a low protein content formula milk, a third had a formula with a higher level of protein, while the rest were breast-fed during their first year.

In order to qualify as breast-fed, kids had to be either exclusively given breast milk, or have a maximum of three bottles per week.

Then the infants were followed up to the age of two with regular weight, height and body mass index measurements taken.

At the age of two, there was no difference in height between the groups, but the high protein group were the heaviest.

The researchers suggest lower protein intakes in infancy might protect against later obesity.

The children are being followed up further to see whether those given the lower protein formulas have a reduced risk of obesity later on.

Professor Berthold Koletzko, from the University of Munich, Germany, and who led the study, said: “These results from the EU Childhood Obesity Programme underline the importance of promoting and supporting breastfeeding because of the long-term benefits it brings.

“They also highlight the importance of the continual development and improvement in the composition of infant formula. Limiting the protein content of infant and follow-on formula can normalise early growth and might contribute greatly to reducing the long-term risk of childhood overweight and obesity.” (ANI)

Soon, a simple urine test to diagnose heart disease

Washington, January 29 (ANI): Aussie researchers have moved a step closer to developing the first urine test for diagnosing coronary artery disease (CAD), the condition behind most heart attack cases.

Lead researcher Karlheinze Peter says that such a test may save livesin the future by allowing earlier diagnosis and monitoring of the disease.

The most reliable test for diagnosing CAD is angiography, an invasive test in which doctors inject special dyes into the body to visualize, via X-rays, fatty plaque deposits in the arteries of the heart.

The technique is invasive, expensive, time-consuming, and may miss CAD in its earliest stages, according to background information in a research article in the Journal of Proteome Research.

Peter said that with a view to developing a faster and more convenient test, the research team collected urine samples from a group of 67 patients – 41 with CAD and 26 without – and analysed them for differences in protein content.

The researcher said that with the aid of a newly developed method, they could identify a group of 17 peptides (building blocks of proteins) that appeared to be directly associated with CAD.

According to Peter, the urine-based peptides indicated the presence of the disease with an 84 percent accuracy rate as compared to CAD cases confirmed using angiography, underscoring their potential for diagnostic screening. (ANI)