| Literature DB >> 33848417 |
Reza Shirazinia1, Ali Akbar Golabchifar1, Mohammad Reza Fazeli2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infantile colic (IC) is excessive crying in otherwise healthy children. Despite vast research efforts, its etiology remains unknown.Entities:
Keywords: Cytokines; Gastrointestinal inflammation; Infantile colic; Meta-analysis; Probiotics
Year: 2021 PMID: 33848417 PMCID: PMC8650819 DOI: 10.3345/cep.2020.01676
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Exp Pediatr ISSN: 2713-4148
Clinical trials included in the meta-analysis
| Study | Type of study | Probiotic strain (dose) | Duration of treatment | Population and type of feeding | Age | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kianifar et al. [ | A randomized controlled trial | 30 Days | BF infants | 15–120 Days | Significant improvement of colic symptoms in the probiotics group | |
| Pärtty et al. [ | Doubleblind placebo-controlled intervention trial | LGG (4.5 × 109 CFU/day) | 28 Days | 30 BF and FF infants | 34.8–38 Days | The parents declared about the protective role of probiotics in infantile colic but the results of the evaluation of crying time were not significantly different between placebo and probiotics group |
| Mi et al. [ | A placebo-controlled observational randomized study | 21 Days | 42 BF infants | Less than 4 months | 100% Treatment success in the probiotic group, significant reduction of mean crying time, maternal depression and significant increment of maternal satisfaction. | |
| Savino et al. [ | Randomized clinical trial | 28 Days | 50 BF infants | <50 Days | Probiotics treatment significantly reduced crying time partly due to the increased expression of CC-chemokine receptor Meanwhile, there was no significant difference in the experimental groups in term of IL-10. | |
| Gerasimov et al. [ | Phase II randomized parallel group prospective controlled multi-center dietary study. | 28 Days | 168 BF infants | 4–12 Weeks | Significant reduction of crying and fussing after 28 days of probiotic administration. | |
| Sung et al. [ | Double-blind, placebocontrolled randomized trial. | 30 Days | 167 BF or FF infants | <3 Months | There was not a significant difference in crying time, fecal calprotectin levels, or | |
| Savino et al. [ | A double-blind, placebo-controlled randomized trial | 30 Days | 87 BF infants | <12 Weeks | Significantly shorter crying time in the infants received probiotics. | |
| Forkhead box P3 (FOXP3) significantly increased with probiotic consumption. | ||||||
| Increased | ||||||
| Ashraf et al. [ | A nonblinded randomized controlled trial | 7 Days | 90 BF infants | 21–90 Days | Improvement of colic symptoms was associated with the probiotic consumption | |
| Giglione et al. [ | A pilot, controlled, randomized, and doubleblind study | 90 Days | 60 FF and BF infants | | Significant reduction of the mean crying time in the probiotic group was observed after treatment for 3 months. | |
| Baldassarre et al. [ | A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial | 21 days | 62 BF Infants | 30–90 Days | Significant reduction of crying time in comparison with the placebo as well as higher responders to treatment was observed in the probiotic group. | |
| No significant difference were observed regarding bowel movements, microbiota composition or stool consistency. |
CFU, colony-forming unit; BF, breast-fed; FF, formula-fed.
Fig. 1.PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses) flow diagram.
Fig. 2.(A) Risk of bias for each randomized controlled trial included in our study: low risk of bias (+), high risk of bias (‐), unclear risk of bias (?). (B) Bar chart expressing the percent risk of bias for each included study.
Fig. 3.Evaluation of probiotic efficacy in the treatment of infantile colic. SD, standard deviation; CI, confidence interval; df, degrees of freedom.
Anti-inflammatory properties of probiotics with efficacy proven in clinical trials
| Single strain | Anti-inflammatory marker | Dose (duration) | Probiotic combination | Anti-inflammatory marker | Dose (duration) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Increased CC-chemokine receptor 7 [ | 108 CFU/day (21 and 28 days) | Reduced intestinal permeability [ | (125×106 CFU/day) (28 days) | ||
| - | 108 CFU/day (28 days) | Reduced fecal calprotectin as well as increased fecal IgA due to | 107 and 106 CFU/g 240 mL of solution per day (mean±SD, 210±127) | ||
| - | 1×109 twice a day (28 days) | reduced TNF-α levels [ | 5 mL/108 (90 days) | ||
| - | - | - | Increased IL-10 production [ | 109 CFU per day (14 days) | |
| - | - | - | Normalization of intestinal integrity along with the reduced mucosal secretion of TNF-alpha and IFNgamma in the animal models of Crohn's disease [ | 5×109 CFU/day (21 days) | |
| - | - | - | - | 107 CFU (30 days) | |
| - | - | - | Reduced TNF-α [ | 108 CFU/day (30 days) |
CFU, colony-forming unit; SD, standard deviation; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; IL, interleukin.
Probiotics with anti-inflammatory effects in various inflammation models, especially in the gastrointestinal tract.