Pediatrics
Pediatrics
Supporting maternal gut health and optimizing breast milk composition could help shape healthy infant gut development.
Pediatrics
The findings may inform strategies to improve early-life gut health as well as infant nutrition and disease prevention.
Gynecology, Pediatrics
Dietary fiber during early life protects fertility by supporting healthy gut microbes and preventing ovarian damage caused by high-fat diets.
Bifidobacterium breve 2TA, Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus L13B, and Lactobacillus gasseri L6 are not just bacteria: they are witnesses to the intimate, ancestral dialogue between mothers, infants, and microbes.
Immunology, Pediatrics
Antibodies in breast milk “teach” a newborn’s gut immune system to respond appropriately to microbes and maintain intestinal balance without causing unnecessary inflammation.
Pediatrics, Gynecology
Maternal oral microbiota plays a key role in influencing infant gut health and disease risk.
Pediatrics
Breastfeeding and Bifidobacterium are key factors in shaping the infant resistome and could offer strategies to reduce antibiotic resistance early in life.
Allergology, Pediatrics
Specific gut bacteria are important in early life for healthy immune development.
Immunology, Pediatrics
Bacterial metabolites such as inosine could be used as a therapy to strengthen infant immunity after early microbiota disruption.
Pediatrics
Professor Roberto Berni Canani, pediatrician at the University of Naples Federico II, previews the key topics he will present at the 10th International Congress of Probiotics, Prebiotics and Postbiotics in…