>https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19496976
>while studies have shown that milk doesn't increase estrogen in mice, it does have a big effect on humans.
Seriously should everyone just stop drinking milk?
Estrogen and testosterone levels are constantly varying due to a myriad of shit. The human body works in such a way that when one rises, the other is raised proportionally until the first one goes down to normal, which it will. This assuming you're a moderately healthy human being.
Nobody has grown tits or lost their balls because they drink milk or one of the other thousand things that gets posted here and people freak out about because it marginally increases E levels. Now stop.
>>42232215
>Jew the post
Yeah, stop drinking milk.
>>42232266
The fuck are you on about you retard? Is the fact that hormone levels vary based on environment, stimulus and nutrition fucking news to you?
>>42232015
just drink almost milk, make sure you activate first though of course senpoops
>>42232015
>while studies have shown that milk doesn't increase estrogen in mice, it does have a big effect on humans.
>Seriously should everyone just stop drinking milk?
No
>>42232266
>http://suppversity.blogspot.com/2014/01/true-or-false-dairy-is-toxic-hormone.html
Also highly doubt the"milk=prostate cancer" entirely especially when in the article it says:
>Estrone and prostate cancer risk in men: As far as the estrone levels Maruyama et al. measured in their 2010 study are concerned it is very difficult to tell, whether or not the 26% increase in E2 levels is or isn't a problem.
>The estrone values in the Maruyama study are unrealistic. With a normal range of <68pg/ml the subjects in the Maruyama study would have elevated E1 levels to begin with, if the measurement was correct.
>difficult to tell
>unrealistic
and
>What remains to be seen, though, is whether future epidemiological evidence will support or refute the currently heralded hypothesis that dairy consumption increases prostate cancer risk and whether we will be able to identify more feasible explanations for this relations than those that are implicated by the results Maruyama et al. present in their 2010 study.
>http://sciencedrivennutrition.com/hormones-milk/
>http://suppversity.blogspot.de/2014/05/bcfa-gut-health-immunity-cancer.html
>http://suppversity.blogspot.com/2013/12/dairy-good-bad-or-ugly-latest-studies.html
>http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07315724.2011.10719992