Reprint
Dairy Products
Edited by
November 2018
212 pages
- ISBN978-3-03897-368-3 (Paperback)
- ISBN978-3-03897-369-0 (PDF)
This is a Reprint of the Special Issue Dairy Products that was published in
Medicine & Pharmacology
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary
Emerging evidence indicates that dairy foods and ingredients can influence human health. There is increasing interest around the specific role that particular components within dairy foods, such as fat, protein, and other bioactives, play in health. Dairy fat, although a source of saturated fat, may have neutral or beneficial effects on cardiometabolic and gut health. Further, specific types of fat within dairy fat have been linked with improved metabolic health and immune function, while the amount of milk fat globule membrane enclosing the fat may be important in cardiac and muscular outcomes. Dairy proteins may assist in maintaining skeletal muscle mass, particularly post-exercise. While research into individual dairy components is ongoing, the overall dairy food matrix may offer unique benefits to human health as well. For example, the fermentation process involved in cheese and yoghurt production may enhance the nutritional and functional abilities of these foods. This collection of research articles explores the effects of dairy components on health.]
Format
- Paperback
License and Copyright
© 2019 by the authors; CC BY license
Keywords
colon; fecal output; motility; opioid; serotonin; elderly; probiotic; green banana pulp; fermented milk; dairy; infant feeding; Sweden; HLA; milk powder; formula; gluten; commercial infant foods; fermented milk; cytokine regulation; Lactobacillus; lipopolysaccharide; dairy; cardiovascular health; pulse wave velocity; arterial stiffness; dairy; SEANUTS; stunting; underweight; vitamin A; vitamin D; haemoglobin; bovine lactoferrin; moDC; DC differentiation; semi-mature phenotype; hyporesponsive; LPS; dairy food; whey peptide; cognitive function; caprine milk carbohydrates; in vitro studies; small intestinal epithelium; barrier integrity; probiotic lactobacilli bacteria; consumer; dairy products; health aspects; dairy; vitamin D; vitamin D-fortified milk; vitamin D intake; vitamin D fortification; 25-hydroxyvitamin D; bioavailability; dairy; pig model; vitamin B12; byproducts; sustainability; functional foods; dairy products; innate immune memory; trained immunity; raw bovine milk; bovine IgG; bovine lactoferrin; dietary compounds; monocytes