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Yoghurt can make you ‘slimmer and sexier'

Although the study is still in progress, the findings could have implications for human fertility, weight control and hair health.

Yoghurt can make you ‘slimmer and sexier'

Scientists, who set out to better understand the effects of yoghurt on obesity, have revealed that not only does the treat make mice slimmer; it also makes them sexier.

Studies in humans suggest eating yoghurt may help ward off age-related weight gain.

But Massa­chusetts Institute of Technology researchers Eric Alm and Susan Erdman wanted to know why.

“Maybe it has to do with the healthy bacteria that live in our guts,” ABC News quoted Alm, an evolutionary biologist, explaining how there are 10 times more bacteria in the body than human cells, as saying.

“Maybe probiotics in the yoghurt have something to do with the effects on weight.”

To test the theory, Alm and Erdman fed one group of mice a normal mouse diet and the other group the same diet with a mouse-sized serving of vanilla yoghurt.

“One of the first things we noticed was their fur coat,” said Erdman, assistant director of comparative medicine at MIT.

“It was so thick and shiny; shockingly shiny.”

But shiny fur was not the only aspect that set the yoghurt-eating mice apart from their siblings: They were also slimmer, and the males had “swagger.”

“We knew there was something different in the males, but we weren’t sure what it was at first,” Erdman said.

“You know when someone’s at the top of their game, how they carry themselves differently? Well, imagine that in a mouse.”

A lab technician would soon find out what was giving these males their sexy strut.

“She noticed their testicles were protruding out really far,” Erdman said.

It turns out their testicles were 5% bigger than those of their non-yoghurt eating counterparts, and 15% bigger than those of mice on a diet designed to mimic “junk food” in humans. And in this case, bigger was better.

“Almost everything about the fertility of those males is enhanced,” Erdman said, explaining how yoghurt-eating males mated faster and produced more offspring.

“There were legitimate physiological differences in males fed probiotics, not just the extra sexiness.”

On the other hand, female mice that ate yoghurt were even shinier than the males, and tended to be better moms to their larger litters.

“We think it’s the probiotics in the yogurt,” Alm said.

“We think those organisms are somehow directly interacting with the mice to produce these effects.”

Although the study is still in progress, the findings could have implications for human fertility, weight control and hair health.

“When I saw those fur coats, I thought about adding more yogurt to my diet,” Erdman added.

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