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by visava
2692 days ago
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This diet with stopping milk products can.
Milk protein with 17 rings similar to beta cells.
Body in an attempt to kill milk protein which escapes into blood without breaking down the ring structure also kills beta cells
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4edofibXOiM
watch at 48 mins |
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From the video:
> If you observe milk protein (casein) under a microscope it will appears as this - there are 17 links in it.
The video says "links", you say "rings". It's a small but important distinction. Proteins are made by linked aminoacids, so sing "link" is a good approximation, but most of them don't look like "rings".
I can't find where the "17" comes from. After a few google searches I found that casein has approximately 210 aminoacids, the number can vary, but it is not 17.
(Also, you can't see a single casein protein under a normal microscope, nor the parts of it. I guess it's only a metaphor, but it makes me suspicious.)
I don't find the part in the video that says that casein escapes to blood. (I didn't try too hard.)
Casein is split in the stomach by the enzymes IIRC they are the regular enzymes that also split the proteins in meat, and other food, not specialized enzymes.
(There is an specialized enzyme for lactose that is an special sugar in milk, but this is not what the video or you say. But if this were dangerous, we'd have a lot of babies with diabetes. Moreover, only some adults produce the enzyme to digest lactose, so it would be easy to test.)
I didn't find a source that says that beta cells have some proteins that are similar to casein. It is posible, but I doubt.
And IIRC most autoinmune diseases, where the body get confused and start to attack some part of it don't go away after you remove the initial agent that causes the reaction. So stopping drinking milk won't stop the reaction.