City
Epaper

Study links neonatal antibiotic use to reduced growth in boys

By ANI | Updated: January 27, 2021 09:50 IST

According to a new study, exposure to antibiotics in the first days of life is believed to affect various physiological aspects of neonatal development.

Open in App

According to a new study, exposure to antibiotics in the first days of life is believed to affect various physiological aspects of neonatal development.

The findings of the study were published in the journal 'Nature Communications'. The study, led by Bar-Ilan University's Azrieli Faculty of Medicine, revealed that antibiotic treatment within 14 days of birth is associated with reduced weight and height in boys - but not girls -- up to the age of six.

By contrast, the study showed significantly higher body mass index (BMI) in both boys and girls following antibiotic use after the neonatal period, and within the first six years of life. The findings may be the result of changes in the development of the gut microbiome.

The impact of neonatal antibiotic exposure was investigated in a cohort of 12,422 children born between 2008-2010 at the Turku University Hospital in Turku, Finland. The babies had no genetic abnormalities or significant chronic disorders affecting growth and did not need long-term antibiotic treatment. Antibiotics had been administered within the first 14 days of life to 1,151 (9.3 per cent) of the neonates in the study.

The authors found that boys exposed to antibiotic treatment exhibited significantly lower weight as compared to non-exposed children throughout the first six years. They also exhibited significantly lower height and BMI between the ages of two and six. This observation was replicated in a German cohort.

Further, antibiotic exposure during the first days of life was found to be associated with disturbances in the gut microbiome up until the age of two. Infants exposed to neonatal antibiotics exhibited significantly lower gut microbiome richness as compared to non-exposed infants at the age of one month.

Interestingly, at the age of six months, the infants treated with antibiotics reached the bacterial richness level of a control group of infants, and at the ages of 12 and 24 months, the antibiotic-treated subjects gained significantly higher levels of bacterial richness as compared to the control subjects.

In additional experiments led by PhD student Atara Uzan, the researchers demonstrated that germ-free male mice who were given the gut microbiome of antibiotic-exposed infants also displayed growth failure. These findings suggest a potential link between neonatal antibiotic exposure and impaired childhood growth, which may be a result of alterations caused by antibiotics in the composition of the gut microbiome.

"Antibiotics are vitally important and life-saving medications in newborn infants. Our results suggest that their use may also have unwanted long-term consequences which need to be considered," said Professor Omry Koren, of the Azrieli Faculty of Medicine of Bar-Ilan University, who led the study together with Professor Samuli Rautava, of the University of Turku and the University of Helsinki.

Follow up research will aim to investigate other potential adverse outcomes related to neonatal antibiotic exposure.

( With inputs from ANI )

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Nature CommunicationsBar-ilan universityAtara uzanFinlandTurkuOmry koren
Open in App

Related Stories

MaharashtraPune Man Scammed of 16 Lakhs Under False Job Opportunity Promise in Finland

InternationalRussia-Ukraine War: Vladimir Putin Vows to Deploy Troops Along Finland Border After It Joins NATO

PoliticsKejriwal meets 50 MCD school principals who underwent training at IIM Ahmedabad

InternationalWater on exoplanets 100x more likely: Study

TechnologyArterial stiffness cause metabolic syndrome in adolescents: Study

Health Realted Stories

HealthCentre extends financial aid to indigenous indoor air purification solution

HealthChildhood exposure to bacterial toxin can trigger Colorectal cancer among the young: Study

HealthIndia achieves breakthrough in gene therapy for haemophilia: Minister

LifestyleWalking Tips for Summer: Know the Best time to Walk to Avoid Heatstroke

HealthCentre launches campaign to achieve 100 pc Measles-Rubella immunisation coverage