I was vegan for ten years, eating loads of soy products. I developed gyne, but it was BEFORE the veganism, and the only time the gyne seemd to get worse was when I took Prevacid for a year for recurring gastritis. I've spoken to two endocrinologists, two nutritionists, and done lots of my own research and there seems to be zero evidence (in peer-reviewed journals, anyway) of soy products leading to any sort of feminization.
To STILLgotIT: While I'm glad you're protective of your boys and want to avoid their developing our little 'problem,' the scenario you mentioned in no way proves that soy leads to gyne or other feminizing traits. Hormones are quite variable during childhood (hell, for a while in the womb we have no gender) and what you describe is, according to all published science I've found, a coincidence. I say this only in case your sons need to have soy in their diets at some point, since I don't want you to worry
The hormones fed to animals by industrialized farming and dairy farming are more of a concern, as are many plastics. If you can, buy organic and hormone-free, or skip the meat for that meal. Oh, and avoid proton-pump inhibitors like Prevacid - trust me!
brooklyn,
I agree that it doesn't "prove" that the soy caused the condition. But, for me to continue providing soy to my sons would be me "betting their health" that it wasn't the soy.
As a man, I don't want
anything to tamper with the delicate hormonal structure in my, or my son's, bodies.
As you mentioned, there are many other sources of estrogenic compounds (plastics in manufacturing, pesticides, etc.). But, soy is a very real source. People who are in the habit of consuming soy do so in large amounts... not in moderation, typically.
The average person who consumes soy is a "soy-fiend" due to their stance against meat. Soy-milk, soy-cheese, soy-hotdogs, soy-hamburgers, etc.
Meat, too, is laced with rBGH and a myriad of other hormones and antibiotics. Who knows, gyne could be the least of our worries when it comes to possible side-effects from all of this.
The question to ask yourself is "do soy isoflavones act upon your body in an estrogenic way?" The answer is, most definitely, "yes, they do."
Thus, the question becomes "how much, if any, do I want of this stuff in my body?"
More reading:
http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/no-joy.htmlhttp://www.businessweek.com/2000/00_51/b3712218.htmThere are TONS more studies and articles on the subject for those willing to Google around and find them.