Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

Gut Bacteria May Help Explain Benefits of Breastfeeding

Translator

Editor

10 May 2017 12:38 WIB

Breastfeeding. Image: shutterstock

TEMPO.CO, Jakarta - Breastfeeding has long been linked to a variety of health benefits in babies, and a new study suggests that bacteria transferred from mothers to their nursing infants might be at least partly responsible.

Researchers focused on what's known as the microbiome, or all of the bacteria, viruses and fungi that live in and on the body. They tested 107 mother-baby pairs for organisms on women's breasts and in their milk, and they also examined babies' stool as a way of determining what types of organisms were in the infant gut microbiome.

While they found distinct types of bacteria in milk, breast tissue and infant stool, researchers also found infants' gut microbial communities matched the bacteria in their mothers' milk and on their mothers' skin much more than it resembled samples from other women in the study.

That suggests each mother's milk was a major contributor to her own infant’s gut microbiome.

"We were able to show that there are bacteria in milk and that these bacteria could be traced to bacteria in infant stools," said senior study author Dr. Grace Aldrovandi, chief of the division of infectious diseases at Mattel Children's Hospital at the University of California, Los Angeles.

"This supports the hypothesis that milk microbes are a mechanism by which breastfeeding provides benefit," Aldrovandi said by email.

Pediatricians recommend that mothers exclusively breastfeed infants until at least 6 months of age because it is tied to reduced risk for babies of ear and respiratory infections, sudden infant death syndrome, allergies, childhood obesity and diabetes.

Mothers may benefit too, with longer periods of breastfeeding linked to lower risks of depression, bone deterioration and certain cancers.

Based on lab tests of bacteria found in milk, on skin and in stool in the current study, researchers estimated that babies who got at least 75 percent of their nutrition from breast milk during the first month of life received about 28 percent of their gut bacteria from their mother's milk. These babies also got about 10 percent of their gut bacteria from mothers' skin and 62 percent from sources researchers didn't determine.

The more babies nursed, the more their gut bacterial community changed to resemble what was found in their mother's milk.

And in babies who got more of their nutrition exclusively from breastfeeding, microbial communities were slightly more diverse overall and different microbes predominated compared to babies who breastfed less.

One limitation of the study is that researchers didn't assess the origins of the breast milk bacteria or other bacterial communities from the mother that might have contributed to the infant gut microbiome, the authors note. Nor did they assess any effects on the babies’ health based on differences in their microbiomes.

Still, the results build on previous research suggesting that the infant gut microbiome is different for breast-fed and formula-fed babies, said Dr. Alexander Khoruts, a researcher at the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis who wasn't involved in the study.

"We've always assumed that most of these microbes come from the mother," Khoruts said by email. "They found that breastfeeding is the major source of microbial transfer during the early months of life, and I think the study provides supportive evidence for the current recommendations of exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months and continued breastfeeding to 12 months."

Many factors can influence the infant gut microbiome, including breastfeeding, whether babies arrived by vaginal or surgical delivery and antibiotic use, noted Jose Clemente, a researcher in the genetics and genomic sciences at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York.

"The beneficial effects of breastfeeding are well known, and this study provides further evidence by demonstrating that probiotic bacteria found in breast milk can be transferred to the infant," Clemente, who wasn't involved in the study, said by email. "Every little bit helps, so even some amount of breast milk can be a source of beneficial bacteria for babies."

REUTERS




9 Tips to Maintain Body Weight During Eid al-Fitr Festivity

11 hari lalu

9 Tips to Maintain Body Weight During Eid al-Fitr Festivity

An expert shares several tips to maintain an ideal body weight during the Eid al-Fitr celebration.


Indonesia Records Over 5,000 People Infected with Singapore Flu, Govt Urges Public to Maintain Immunity

18 hari lalu

Indonesia Records Over 5,000 People Infected with Singapore Flu, Govt Urges Public to Maintain Immunity

Indonesian Govt urges people to maintain their health and immunity amid the spread of infection of several influenza variants, including Singapore Flu


Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Must Heed Ethics, UI Researcher Says

31 hari lalu

Artificial Intelligence in Medicine Must Heed Ethics, UI Researcher Says

The utilization of artificial intelligence or AI in medicine must still heed ethical principles.


Sorong Health Office Finds 47 Malaria Cases in January-March

33 hari lalu

Sorong Health Office Finds 47 Malaria Cases in January-March

The Health Office in South Sorong, Southwest Papua, found 47 malaria cases from January to March 2024 based on detection results and data collection.


Indonesia Delivers 10mn Doses of Polio Vaccines to Afghanistan

41 hari lalu

Indonesia Delivers 10mn Doses of Polio Vaccines to Afghanistan

Afghanistan is one of the countries in the world that is categorized as a polio-endemic country.


KPU Confirms Death of Two KPPS Officers in Jakarta

16 Februari 2024

KPU Confirms Death of Two KPPS Officers in Jakarta

KPU Jakarta confirmed the death of two election organizing group (KPPS) officers in North Jakarta and Central Jakarta.


Epidemiologist Says Presidential Debate Fails to Tackle Health Issues; Prabowo's Solution 'Inappropriate'

5 Februari 2024

Epidemiologist Says Presidential Debate Fails to Tackle Health Issues; Prabowo's Solution 'Inappropriate'

Presidential candidates failed to get at the heart of health issues discussed during the presidential debate, the epidemiologist said.


Presidential Debate: Ganjar Pranowo Pledges to Build Health Facilities in Every Village in Indonesia

4 Februari 2024

Presidential Debate: Ganjar Pranowo Pledges to Build Health Facilities in Every Village in Indonesia

Presidential candidate number 3 Ganjar Prabowo promised to build health facilities in every village in Indonesia during the 5th presidential debate


Mesh Bio Raises US$3.5mn of Series A Funding to Make Digital Twin Technologies Available at Scale

30 Januari 2024

Mesh Bio Raises US$3.5mn of Series A Funding to Make Digital Twin Technologies Available at Scale

Mesh Bio's funding round led by East Ventures will enable the scaling of deployment around Southeast Asia.


Jokowi Reports 267 Million of Indonesians are BPJS Card Holders

24 Januari 2024

Jokowi Reports 267 Million of Indonesians are BPJS Card Holders

Jokowi claimed that no other country in the world with citizens as large as Indonesia has universal healthcare free of charge such as BPJS.