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The importance of appropriate initial bacterial colonization of the intestine in newborn, child and adult health

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2017

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Walker, W. Allan. 2017. “The importance of appropriate initial bacterial colonization of the intestine in newborn, child and adult health.” Pediatric research 82 (3): 387-395. doi:10.1038/pr.2017.111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/pr.2017.111.

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The fetus does not reside in a sterile intrauterine environment and is exposed to commensal bacteria from the maternal gut/blood stream which crosses the placenta and enters the amniotic fluid. This intestinal exposure to colonizing bacteria continues at birth and during the first year of life and has a profound influence on lifelong health. Why is this important? Intestinal crosstalk with colonizing bacteria in the developing intestine affects the infant’s adaptation to extrauterine life (immune homeostasis) and provides protection against disease expression (allergy, autoimmune disease, obesity, etc.) later in life. Colonizing intestinal bacteria are critical to the normal development of host defense. Disrupted colonization (dysbiosis) due to maternal dysbiosis, cesarean section delivery, use of perinatal antibiotics or premature delivery may adversely affect gut development of host defense and predispose to inflammation rather than homeostasis leading to increased susceptibility to disease later in life. Babies born by cesarean section have a higher incidence of allergy, type 1 diabetes and obesity. Infants given repeated antibiotic regimens during the first year of life are more likely to have asthma as adolescents. This research breakthrough helps to explain the shift in disease paradigms from infections to immune mediated in children from developed countries. This review will develop this research breakthrough.

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