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Yale study: Breastfeeding your baby may help prevent type 2 diabetes

Researchers found that it can improve the number of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas and increase insulin sensitivity in mothers.

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By Stephen Beech via SWNS

Breastfeeding may help prevent type 2 diabetes, according to a new study.

Researchers found that it can improve the number of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas and increase insulin sensitivity in mothers, helping to protect them against type 2 diabetes in later life.

Several previous studies in women have shown that prolonged breastfeeding lowers a mother’s subsequent lifetime risk for type 2 diabetes.

But the reason for that was unknown, according to lead researcher Dr. Julie Hens.

Her research team designed the new study in mice to compare the metabolic effects of breastfeeding to non-breastfeeding and to investigate changes in metabolism that are the result of lactation.

They studied mice who became pregnant and delivered their pups and split them into two groups - those that nursed and those whose pups were removed immediately after birth.

Mice in the lactating group were then studied a month after the pups were weaned and were compared to aged-matched mice that had delivered but not nursed.

The researchers found that the non-lactating mice and lactating mice had similar body weights overall.

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However, Dr. Hens said the non-lactating mice had an increase specifically in a type of metabolically active fat analogous to the visceral fat in humans that is well known to increase the risk of developing diabetes.

She explained that mice that did not lactate had fewer insulin-producing cells in their pancreas.

Dr. Hens said: "Having fewer of these cells means the body has less reserve of insulin production, which might contribute to an increased risk of developing diabetes.

"Mice that did not lactate also had more insulin resistance, which occurs when cells in the muscles, fat and liver do not respond as they should to insulin.

"Over time, this can stress the insulin-producing cells, causing them to fail and leading to diabetes."

Dr. Hens, of Yale University in the United States, added: “It’s often assumed that nursing leads to a lower risk of diabetes because it is associated with weight loss, which improves metabolism.

"However, studies in women have shown that this protective effect is independent of weight loss.

"Our study in mice also corroborates these findings and suggests that the protective effect of nursing may be related to effects both to increase the reserves of insulin-producing cells and to lessen whole body resistance to the effects of insulin."

The findings were presented at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.

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