Hi Gonneke,
The answer is inside your question: The student misread her reference. It is not true that 80% of the 'contents' of milk is macrophages. 80% of the cells in human milk are macrophages. Language is a tricky thing :)
Marcia McCoy
>Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2008 12:10:57 -0700
>From: gonneke van veldhuizen <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: macrophages in human milk
> Dear friends,
> I am in desperate need for your help and wisdom. I mentor a last year�s midwife
>student for her thesis about relactation. She�s doing great, but somewhere she mentioned
>that human milk is 80% macrophages. I asked her to re-do her research on this, because
>there�s a lot more in human milk than macrophages. Then she came up with her reference:
> <ProMom�s 101 reasons to breastfeed; reason #10
> Breast milk contains immunities to diseases and aids in the development of baby's
>immune system.
> Formula provides neither of these benefits. "Breastfed babies have fewer illnesses
>because human milk transfers to the infant a mother's antibodies to disease. About 80% of
>the cells in breast milk are macrophages, cells that kill bacteria, fungi, and viruses.
>Breastfed babies are protected in varying degrees from a number of illnesses including,
>pneumonia, botulism, bronchitis, staphylococcal infections, influenza, ear infections,
>and German measles. Furthermore, mothers produce antibodies to what ever disease is
>present in their environment, making their milk custom-designed to fight diseases their
>babies are exposed to as well."
>Williams RD, "Breast-Feeding Best Bet for Babies",
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