The risk of developing asthma may increase depending on how long they breastfeed.
Dr. Liat Shenhav from New York University’s Grossman University research team published a study that shows that breastfeeding for more than three months can reduce the risk of developing asthma through a mean improvement in gradually on digestive and nasal microorganisms.
When comparing changes in intestinal and nasal micro-organisms over the first year of life among 3,500 children who took part in the ‘CHILD Cohort Study’, a prospective birth cohort study, it was find if breast milk has been stopped before 3 months of age and only formula. fed, formula components were retained in the intestines.
Previous research has shown that the essential amino acid tryptophan and its metabolites are associated with the regulation and suppression of the immune system, and that infants who stopped breastfeeding early and were fed formula had short-chain fatty acids in their intestines earlier than infancy. continuing to breastfeed.
Special bacteria are needed to break down components of breast milk, such as complex human milk oligosaccharides (HMO), and just as a pacemaker regulates the heartbeat, breast milk can regulate timing. on the colonization of the intestinal and nasal micro-organisms of the newborn, explained Dr. Liat Shenhav.
Regardless of environmental factors such as prenatal smoking, antibiotic exposure, or the mother’s history of asthma, there were differences in the composition of the gut microbiome according to the duration of breastfeeding develop a machine learning model that can
NYU Langone Health/NYU Grossman School of Medicine
2024-09-22 23:43:00
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