| Literature DB >> 31921169 |
Chiara Tirone1,2, Lucilla Pezza1,2, Angela Paladini1,2, Milena Tana1,2, Claudia Aurilia1,2, Alessandra Lio1,2, Silvia D'Ippolito3,4, Chiara Tersigni3,4, Brunella Posteraro5,6, Maurizio Sanguinetti5,6, Nicoletta Di Simone3,4, Giovanni Vento1,2.
Abstract
In recent years, an aberrant gastrointestinal colonization has been found to be associated with an higher risk for postnatal sepsis, necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) and growth impairment in preterm infants. As a consequence, the reasons of intestinal dysbiosis in this population of newborns have increasingly become an object of interest. The presence of a link between the gut and lung microbiome's development (gut-lung axis) is emerging, and more data show as a gut-brain cross talking mediated by an inflammatory milieu, may affect the immunity system and influence neonatal outcomes. A revision of the studies which examined gut and lung microbiota in preterm infants and a qualitative analysis of data about characteristic patterns and related outcomes in terms of risk of growing impairment, Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC), Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia (BPD), and sepsis have been performed. Microbiota take part in the establishment of the gut barrier and many data suggest its immune-modulator role. Furthermore, the development of the gut and lung microbiome (gut-lung axis) appear to be connected and able to lead to abnormal inflammatory responses which have a key role in the pathogenesis of BPD. Dysbiosis and the gut predominance of facultative anaerobes appear to be crucial to the pathogenesis and subsequently to the prevention of such diseases.Entities:
Keywords: bronchopulmonary dysplasia; growth impairment; gut microbiota; gut-lung axis; late-onset sepsis; lung microbiota; necrotizing enterocolitis; preterm infants' outcomes
Year: 2019 PMID: 31921169 PMCID: PMC6920179 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.02910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Summary of different categories of typical gut microbial pattern that can be found in healthy newborns.
| Term neonates | |
| Preterm neonates | |
| Breast feed | |
| Formula feed | |
| Vaginally delivered | |
| C-section |
We report the principal variables that can affect the rising abundance of a population over another: the correspondence may concern either a genus (such as Staphylococcus), either a family (such as Enterobacteriaceae). It clearly shows that there's not a single typical healthy microbiota, but gut microbiota is rather a spectrum, result of all the combination of variables that coexist in an infant.
Summary of the changes in microbial resident population observed in the different pathologic conditions and the underlying pathogenetic mechanisms.
| BPD | Decreased abundance of | A decreased abundance of protective species allows a relative overgrowth of potentially pathogen microbial populations; moreover, Ureaplasma-colonized newborns present peripheral blood leukocytosis and less severe RDS but early radiographic and histologic changes typical of BPD |
| EUGR | Low diversity, persistent dominance of | Nutritional efficacy is dramatically affected by infant dysbiosis. In particular, |
| LOS | Decreased bacterial diversity with a predominance of | Gut microbiota can translocate across a dysfunctional or immature intestinal barrier, overwhelm neonatal immune system and cause sepsis; moreover, intestinal dysbiosis is supposed to alter local and systemic immune function. Natural prebiotics, such as raffinose, inhibit the growth of potentially pathogenic bacteria and promote proliferation of |
| NEC | Decreased bacterial diversity with increased rate of | Antibiotics pressure and enteral feeding generate changes in gut microbiota which may lead to an overgrowth of potential pathogens; moreover, LPS of Gram Negative activates TLR-4 and premature gut reacts with an exaggerated cytokine mediated inflammatory response, which may be due to a deficient expression of inhibitors of the NFkB pathway. |
BPD, Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia; EUGR, Extra-Uterine Growth Restriction; LOS, Late-Onset sepsis; NEC, Necrotising Enterocolitis.