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Effect of Delivery Mode and Nutrition on Gut Microbiota in Neonates

Authors :
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
Kaneko, Kazunari
Source :
Annals of nutrition & metabolism. 74(2):132-139
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

令和元年度<br />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.<br />This study investigated the effect of prebiotic-rich breast milk on overcoming gut microbiota dysbiosis.<br />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.<br />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.<br />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.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
74
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of nutrition & metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.jairo.........b85ff30bb6e8067da3792b1fa43c316b