Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Study focuses on influence of vitamin D supplementation on a baby's gut microbiome

 Study focuses on influence of vitamin D supplementation on a baby's developing gut microbiome.

 The study found that vitamin D supplementation is associated with compositional changes in a baby’s microbiome- notably a lower abundance of the bacteria Megamonas- at 3 months of age.

 Vitamin D plays an important role in early life, supporting bone metabolism and the healthy development of a baby’s immune system, said the senior author of the study.

 Most infants in North America receive vitamin D either as a supplement to breastfeeding or as an ingredient in commercial infant formulas, so we wanted to understand the association between vitamin D and the presence of abundance of key bacteria within a baby’s intestinal tract.

 The researchers  examined the faecal samples taken during home visits from 1,157 infants who are part of the CHILD Cohort Study—a national study that is following nearly 3,500 Canadian children from before birth to adolescence with the primary goal of discovering the root causes of allergies, asthma, obesity and other chronic diseases.

 They found that dorect vitamin D supplementation of infants with vitamin D drops was associated with a lower abundance of Megamonas, regardless of how a baby was fed ( breastfed or formula-fed). While little is known about Megamonas in infancy, our previous research suggests there may be a link between this bacterium ans asthma or respiratory viral infections, so vitamin D may offer additional benefits for childhood health that should be studied further, added a researcher.

 The researchers also assessed the association between infant and maternal vitamin D supplementation and the presence of Clostridioides difficle ( C.difficile) in a baby’s gut. Some infants carry the diarrhea-causing bacterium C.difficile in their guts without any symptoms. However, when the levels of gut bacteria become imbalanced, this particular bacterium can multiply, causing illness and increasing the susceptibility to chronic disease later in childhood, commented the first author of the study.

The study found that nearly 30 % of the infants carried C. difficile, but there was a lower incidence of the bacterium among exclusively breastfed infants. However, neither infant supplementation with vitamin D drops nor maternal vitamin D supplementation during pregnancy or after delivery was associated with C. difficile colonization. Interestingly, maternal consumption of vitamin D-fortified milk was the only factor that reduced the likelihood of C.difficile colonization in infants, added the researcher.

According the researcher, an infant’s gut mirobiota undergoes a rapid change in early life. Therefore, it is critical to understand the factors associated with microbial communities populating the infant gut during this key developmental period.

Low vitamin D levels have been associated with respiratory syncytial virus (RSV)- a common lung infection among infants – and more recently, susceptibility to COVID-19 disease, the researcher pointed out. In the CHILD Cohort Study, we have a unique opportunity to follow our study children as they get older to understand how microbial changes observed as a result of dietary interventions may be associated with later health outcomes such as asthma and viral infections.

This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for medicines, exercises and so on.     

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