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Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood

Western medicine has only recently discovered that the intestinal microbiota is a major determinant of the well-being of the host. Although it would be oversimplifying to limit the benefits of breastfeeding compared to cow milk based infant formula to differences in gastrointestinal flora, the impac...

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Autores principales: VANDENPLAS, Yvan, VEEREMAN-WAUTERS, Genevieve, DE GREEF, Elisabeth, MAHLER, Tania, DEVREKER, Thierry, HAUSER, Bruno
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Japan Bifidus Foundation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4103642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25045316
http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bifidus.30.111
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author VANDENPLAS, Yvan
VEEREMAN-WAUTERS, Genevieve
DE GREEF, Elisabeth
MAHLER, Tania
DEVREKER, Thierry
HAUSER, Bruno
author_facet VANDENPLAS, Yvan
VEEREMAN-WAUTERS, Genevieve
DE GREEF, Elisabeth
MAHLER, Tania
DEVREKER, Thierry
HAUSER, Bruno
author_sort VANDENPLAS, Yvan
collection PubMed
description Western medicine has only recently discovered that the intestinal microbiota is a major determinant of the well-being of the host. Although it would be oversimplifying to limit the benefits of breastfeeding compared to cow milk based infant formula to differences in gastrointestinal flora, the impact of the latter has been demonstrated beyond doubt. As a consequence, gastro intestinal flora manipulation with pre- and probiotics added to infant formula or food (mainly milk based products) and/or with food supplements have become a priority area of high quality research. The composition of intestinal microbiota can be manipulated with “biotics”: antibiotics, prebiotics and probiotics. Commercialised pre- and probiotic products differ in composition and dose. Major threats to the concept of developing a major role for intestinal microbiota manipulation on health are the commercialisation of products claiming health benefits that have not been validated. Legislation of food supplements and medication differs substantially and allows commercialisation of poor quality food supplements, what will result in negative experiences. Medicinal products can only be advertised for which there is scientific proof of benefit that has been demonstrated with “the same product with the same dose in the same indication”. Specificity of prebiotics and probiotics strains and product specificity are of importance, although high quality evidence for this assertion is missing. Dose-efficacy studies are urgently needed. Probiotics are “generally regarded as safe”, but side effects such as septicemia and fungemia have sometimes been reported in high-risk situations.
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spelling pubmed-41036422014-07-18 Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood VANDENPLAS, Yvan VEEREMAN-WAUTERS, Genevieve DE GREEF, Elisabeth MAHLER, Tania DEVREKER, Thierry HAUSER, Bruno Biosci Microflora Review Western medicine has only recently discovered that the intestinal microbiota is a major determinant of the well-being of the host. Although it would be oversimplifying to limit the benefits of breastfeeding compared to cow milk based infant formula to differences in gastrointestinal flora, the impact of the latter has been demonstrated beyond doubt. As a consequence, gastro intestinal flora manipulation with pre- and probiotics added to infant formula or food (mainly milk based products) and/or with food supplements have become a priority area of high quality research. The composition of intestinal microbiota can be manipulated with “biotics”: antibiotics, prebiotics and probiotics. Commercialised pre- and probiotic products differ in composition and dose. Major threats to the concept of developing a major role for intestinal microbiota manipulation on health are the commercialisation of products claiming health benefits that have not been validated. Legislation of food supplements and medication differs substantially and allows commercialisation of poor quality food supplements, what will result in negative experiences. Medicinal products can only be advertised for which there is scientific proof of benefit that has been demonstrated with “the same product with the same dose in the same indication”. Specificity of prebiotics and probiotics strains and product specificity are of importance, although high quality evidence for this assertion is missing. Dose-efficacy studies are urgently needed. Probiotics are “generally regarded as safe”, but side effects such as septicemia and fungemia have sometimes been reported in high-risk situations. Japan Bifidus Foundation 2011-11-17 2011 /pmc/articles/PMC4103642/ /pubmed/25045316 http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bifidus.30.111 Text en Japan Bifidus Foundation http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) License.
spellingShingle Review
VANDENPLAS, Yvan
VEEREMAN-WAUTERS, Genevieve
DE GREEF, Elisabeth
MAHLER, Tania
DEVREKER, Thierry
HAUSER, Bruno
Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title_full Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title_fullStr Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title_full_unstemmed Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title_short Intestinal Microbiota and Health in Childhood
title_sort intestinal microbiota and health in childhood
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4103642/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25045316
http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bifidus.30.111
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