City
Epaper

Bacteria in infants' first stool may indicate their obesity risk

By IANS | Updated: July 10, 2020 21:31 IST

London, July 10 Researchers have revealed that bacteria in meconium the earliest stool of an infant may indicate their ...

Open in App

London, July 10 Researchers have revealed that bacteria in meconium the earliest stool of an infant may indicate their risk of obesity.

Meconium is composed of materials ingested during the time the infant spends in the uterus. The study, published in the journal Pediatric Obesity, Obesity found that the types of normal bacteria found in the meconium may predict an infant's likelihood of later developing obesity.

Several reports have shown that the firstapass meconium hosts a diverse microbiome, but its clinical significance is not known.

"We designed a prospective populationabased cohort study to evaluate whether the meconium microbiome predicts subsequent growth in children," said study authors from the University of Oulu in Finland.

In the study of 212 newborns, children who became overweight at three years of age differed in their meconium bacterial makeup from those with normal weight, having a higher proportion of bacteria in the Bacteroidetes phylum (29 per cent versus 15 per cent).

The findings showed that the microbiome of the first pass meconium predicted subsequent overweight at the age of three years. "The concept of the fetal microbiome is controversial and the colonisation process after birth is better understood than the possible fetal colonization," said study researcher Katja Korpela from the University of Oulu.

"However, there are many prenatal factors affecting the microbial composition of the baby's first stool, such as the mother's use of antibiotics during pregnancy and biodiversity of the home environment during pregnancy," Korpela added.

In conclusion, the research team showed that the microbiome of the first pass meconium, formed during pregnancy, was associated with later overweight in the same children at the age of three years.

The results emphasize the importance of investigating maternal and prenatal factors when considering the pathogenesis of paediatric obesity."It is very interesting that the microbiome formed before birth is possibly linked to a child's subsequent weight status," the study authors wrote.

 

( With inputs from IANS )

Tags: Pediatric ObesityUniversity of ouluKatja korpelaLondonFinlandPremier of saAdministrative capital
Open in App

Related Stories

NationalMumbai-London Atlantic Flight Makes Emergency Landing, More Than 200 Indian Flyers Stuck in Turkey With No Aid

NationalMamata Banerjee Jogging Video: West Bengal CM Says See No One Left Behind During Her Jog in Saree at Hyde Park in London

InternationalLondon: Heathrow Airport to Remain Closed All Day Due to Power Outage After Fire at Hayes Electrical Substation

InternationalLondon Fire: Massive Blaze Erupts at Electrical Station in Hayes, Leaving 16,000 Without Power (Watch Videos)

Social ViralWatch: Woman and Stranger’s Spontaneous "Malhari" Dance Sparks Viral Moment in London

Health Realted Stories

HealthCentre to unveil digital portal for medical value travel: Minister

HealthPilot plant of fortified rice kernels launched at CSIR-NIIST

HealthEven light exercise can help slow cognitive decline in people at risk of Alzheimer's: Study

HealthCountrymen collectively, strongly fought malaria: PM Modi

HealthKerala Health Minister seeks report on why she was not invited to cathlab inauguration