| Literature DB >> 29359170 |
Giusy Ranucci1, Vittoria Buccigrossi1, Maiara Brusco de Freitas2, Alfredo Guarino1, Antonietta Giannattasio1,3.
Abstract
The gastrointestinal microbiota plays a critical role in nutritional, metabolic, and immune functions in infants and young children and has implications for future lung health status. Understanding the role of intestinal dysbiosis in chronic lung disease progression will provide opportunities to design early interventions to improve the course of the disease. Gut microbiota is established within the first 1 to 3 years of life and remains relatively stable throughout the life span. In this review, we report the recent development in research in gut-lung axis, with focus on the effects of targeting microbiota of infants and children at risk of or with progressive lung diseases. The basic concept is to exploit this approach in critical window to achieve the best results in the control of future health.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29359170 PMCID: PMC5735664 DOI: 10.1155/2017/8450496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Main factors and phases of early microbial imprinting.
| (1) Prenatal (colonization with vertically transferred microbial material) |
| (2) Delivery (cesarean section versus natural) |
| (3) Feeding (human milk versus formula milk) |
| (4) Infections |
| (5) Antibiotics |
| (6) Intestinal environment (cystic fibrosis, short gut, celiac disease) |
Gut microbiota alterations induced by antibiotic use.
| Antibiotics | Gut microbiota alterations | Study | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ciprofloxacin | Decrease of the taxonomic richness, diversity, and evenness of the community | Healthy adult humans | [ |
| Amoxicillin | Long-lasting alterations in the gut microbial community including a decrease in overall diversity | Young mice | [ |
| Ampicillin | Decrease of microbial diversity and colonization with antibiotic-resistant microbes | Young mice | [ |
| Ceftriaxone | Gut microbiota dysbiosis | Adult mice | [ |