1. Effect of Delivery Mode and Nutrition on Gut Microbiota in Neonates
- Author
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Akagawa, Shohei, Tsuji, Shoji, Onuma, Chikushi, Akagawa, Yuko, Yamaguchi, Tadashi, Yamagishi, Mitsuru, Yamanouchi, Sohsaku, Kimata, Takahisa, Sekiya, Shin-Ichiro, Ohashi, Atsushi, Hashiyada, Masaki, Akane, Atsushi, and Kaneko, Kazunari
- Subjects
Male ,Bacteria ,Cesarean Section ,Infant, Newborn ,Delivery, Obstetric ,digestive system ,Infant Formula ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Breast Feeding ,Japan ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Vagina ,Dysbiosis ,Humans ,Female - Abstract
令和元年度, The mode of delivery (vaginal or cesarean section) and feeding type (breastfeeding or formula feeding) of neonates are considered the most influential factors in the development of gut microbiota., This study investigated the effect of prebiotic-rich breast milk on overcoming gut microbiota dysbiosis., Stool samples from 36 healthy Japanese neonates were obtained at 4 days and 1 month of age, and divided into 4 groups based on mode of delivery and feeding type. The gut microbiota composition and bacterial diversity were assessed using 16S rRNA sequencing., At 4 days old, vaginally delivered neonates had a significantly higher diversity of bacteria than those born by cesarean section. Bacteroidales and Enterobacteriales were overrepresented in vaginally delivered neonates (p = 0.0031 and p = 0.011), while Bacillales and Lactobacillales were overrepresented in caesarean section delivered neonates (p = 0.012 and p = 0.0016). However, there was little difference in bacterial diversity and bacterial relative abundance at 1 month of age between groups., Cesarean section delivery appeared to reduce the diversity of neonate gut microbiota, resulting in dysbiosis, but this improved to the equivalent level seen in vaginally delivered infants by 1 month of age. Breastfeeding, even for short periods, may therefore improve neonate gut dysbiosis.
- Published
- 2019