Breast-feeding may contribute to the development of healthy bacteria in
a baby's gut, a new study finds.
The results show that three-month-old babies that had been fed only
breast milk had a wider range of bacteria in their guts than babies that were
fed only formula. The researchers also found a link between the bacteria in the
babies' guts and changes in the expression of genes involved in their immune
systems.
"The early neonatal period is a critical phase for both intestinal
digestive development as well as colonization" by the gut bacteria, the
researchers wrote. The study showed an association, not a cause-and-effect
link, between breast-feeding and a healthier infant gut, and more work is
needed to confirm the findings.
Still, there are ways to plausibly explain how breast milk may bring
about changes in a baby's gut bacteria and immune system, the researchers said.
The greater diversity of bacteria seen in the guts of the breast-fed infants
may bring about the activation of certain immunity genes, they wrote.
In the study, researchers looked for genetic material in stool samples
from 12 infants — half of which were breast-fed, and half of which were
formula-fed. They used the genetic material to identify the types of bacteria
in the babies' guts. The results showed that the immune systems of the
breast-fed babies had developed to cope with the wider range of bacteria
present in their intestinal tract. While the guts of the breast-fed infants
showed they had more bacteria associated with "virulence," such as
genes for resistance to antibiotics, the researchers also found increased
activity of immunity genes known to be involved in defending the gut tissue
against foreign invaders, said study researcher Robert Chapkin, a professor of
Nutrition, Biochemistry and Biophysicsat the Texas A&M University.
"Our findings suggest that human milk promotes the beneficial
crosstalk between the immune system and microbe population in the gut, and
maintains intestinal stability," Chapkin said.The study was published in
the journal Genome Biology.
My Health News Daily
No comments:
Post a Comment