2016
DOI: 10.1177/0884533616669362
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What's in the Bottle? A Review of Infant Formulas

Abstract: Infant formulas are designed to be a substitute for breast milk. Since they are sole source of nutrition for growing and developing infants, they are highly regulated by the government. All ingredients in infant formulas must be considered "generally recognized as safe." Manufacturers are continually modifying their products to make them more like breast milk. Functional ingredients added to infant formula include long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, nucleotides, prebiotics, and probiotics. The most common … Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Human milk is the gold standard for infant feeding, and so infant formula manufacturers modify cow's milk to be more like human milk. Cow's milk–based infant formula contains added antibodies, nucleotides, long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, prebiotic oligosaccharides, probiotic bacteria, vitamins, minerals, and some bioactive peptides . Among amino acids, only L‐forms may be added, while D‐forms are removed, as D‐lactic acidosis may occur.…”
Section: Standard Formulasmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Human milk is the gold standard for infant feeding, and so infant formula manufacturers modify cow's milk to be more like human milk. Cow's milk–based infant formula contains added antibodies, nucleotides, long‐chain polyunsaturated fatty acids, prebiotic oligosaccharides, probiotic bacteria, vitamins, minerals, and some bioactive peptides . Among amino acids, only L‐forms may be added, while D‐forms are removed, as D‐lactic acidosis may occur.…”
Section: Standard Formulasmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DHA and ARA are important for regulating growth, inflammatory responses, immune function, vision, and motor and cognitive development in infants . Their average calorie concentration is 0.64–0.67 calories/mL . Some subcategories of standard term infant formula based on cow's milk are organic and “for breastfeeding supplementation.” Standard formulas must meet all of the infant formula guidelines and support normal growth.…”
Section: Standard Formulasmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Typical infant formulas for full-term infants have 19-20 calories per ounce and approximately 1.3-1.4 g of protein per 100 mL [4] . Although there are a variety of potential protein sources for infants, the typical protein source is cow's milk proteins.…”
Section: Hydrolyzed Infant Formulasmentioning
confidence: 99%