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Lactose digestion from yogurt: mechanism and relevance.

Dennis A Savaiano
Review The American journal of clinical nutrition 2014 157 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Type d'étude
Review
Population
None
Intervention
Lactose digestion from yogurt: mechanism and relevance. None
Comparateur
None
Critère de jugement principal
None
Direction de l'effet
Mixed
Risque de biais
Unclear

Abstract

Yogurt is traditionally consumed throughout the world among populations who are seemingly unable to digest lactose. This review provides a historical overview of the studies that show lactose digestion and tolerance from yogurt by lactose-intolerant people. The lactose in yogurt is digested more efficiently than other dairy sources of lactose because the bacteria inherent in yogurt assist with its digestion. The bacterial lactase survives the acidic conditions of the stomach, apparently being physically protected within the bacterial cells and facilitated by the buffering capacity of yogurt. The increasing pH as the yogurt enters the small intestine and a slower gastrointestinal transit time allow the bacterial lactase to be active, digesting lactose from yogurt sufficiently to prevent symptoms in lactose-intolerant people. There is little difference in the lactase capability of different commercial yogurts, because they apparently contain Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus in sufficient quantities (10(8) bacteria/mL). However, Lactobacillus acidophilus appears to require cell membrane disruption to physically release the lactase. Compared with unflavored yogurts, flavored yogurts appear to exhibit somewhat reduced lactase activity but are still well tolerated.

En bref

This review provides a historical overview of the studies that show lactose digestion and tolerance from yogurt by lactose-intolerant people and indicates that flavored yogurts appear to exhibit somewhat reduced lactase activity but are still well tolerated.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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