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  2. Are Dogs Lactose Intolerant? What Experts Advise About ...

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    Because milk tends to have a higher lactose content than its by-products, some dogs can tolerate dairy products like cheese better than milk itself. If your dog does well with cheese—great ...

  3. Can dogs eat cheese? Here are the types that are safe for ...

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    Yes, dogs can eat cheese. Cheese has some health benefits since the dairy product is full of protein, calcium, vitamin A and B-complex vitamins, the American Kennel Club reports.

  4. 15 Worst Foods for High Cholesterol, According to Dietitians

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    Sausage is another high-fat, processed meat you should limit if you have high cholesterol. A 2-inch link of smoked pork sausage has 1.5 grams of saturated fat, or 11% of the daily limit based on ...

  5. List of cholesterol in foods - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Cholesterol_in_Foods

    The human body makes one-eighth to one-fourth teaspoons of pure cholesterol daily. A cholesterol level of 5.5 millimoles per litre or below is recommended for an adult. The rise of cholesterol in the body can give a condition in which excessive cholesterol is deposited in artery walls called atherosclerosis. This condition blocks the blood flow ...

  6. Dog food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dog_food

    A number of common human foods and household ingestibles are toxic to dogs, including chocolate solids (theobromine poisoning), onion and garlic (thiosulfate, alliin or allyl propyl disulfide poisoning [109]), grapes and raisins (cause kidney failure in dogs), milk (some dogs are lactose intolerant and suffer diarrhea; goats' milk can be ...

  7. Lactose intolerance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lactose_intolerance

    Plant-based milks and derivatives such as soy milk, rice milk, almond milk, coconut milk, hazelnut milk, oat milk, hemp milk, macadamia nut milk, and peanut milk are inherently lactose-free. Low-lactose and lactose-free versions of foods are often available to replace dairy-based foods for those with lactose intolerance.

  8. What's the healthiest milk? A guide to whole, raw, almond ...

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    Humans have been drinking milk from other animals for thousands of years, beginning around 10,000 years ago when farmers in early Western Europe drank the milk of domesticated cows as a new source ...

  9. Fat content of milk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fat_content_of_milk

    Today, most skim milk is created by spinning whole milk in a centrifuge so that the fat droplets separate out. [5] To make low fat milk, one can simply mix skim and whole milk in a fixed ratio. [6] The fat content of the raw milk produced by cows ranges from about 3.3% up to 5%.