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Insufficient Evidence of a Breastmilk Microbiota at Six-Weeks Postpartum: A Pilot Study
Breastmilk is thought to influence the infant gut by supplying prebiotics in the form of human milk oligosaccharides and potentially seeding the gut with breastmilk microbes.
Sophie M Leech +2 more
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Cytomegalovirus shedding from breastmilk and mucosal sites in healthy postpartum women: A pilot study [PDF]
Mother-to-child cytomegalovirus (CMV) breastmilk transmission can occur in the postnatal period. In a pilot study, we measured daily CMV detection by polymerase chain reaction in breastmilk, vaginal, and saliva samples from nine healthy CMV-seropositive ...
Tali Azenkot +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
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Breastmilk erythropoietin and mother-to-child HIV transmission through breastmilk
The Lancet, 2002A third to a half the 1.5 million HIV-positive children in the world today acquired their infection via breastfeeding. However, what protects the 85% of breastfed babies of HIV-infected mothers who do not become infected? We postulate that erythropoietin (EPO), a hormone in human milk, has a role in the prevention of HIV transmission during ...
Melissa, Miller +3 more
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Importance of Vacuum for Breastmilk Expression
Breastfeeding Medicine, 2008ABSTRACT Objective: To determine the effect of the strength of applied vacuum on the flow rate and yield of breastmilk using an electric breast pump. Study Design:
Jacqueline C, Kent +6 more
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Breastmilk has many documented beneficial effects on the developing human infant, but the components of breastmilk that influence these developmental pathways have not been fully elucidated.
Oskar Karlsson +2 more
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2023
Abstract Background Osteopontin (OPN) is an important breastmilk protein involved in infant intestinal, immunological, and brain development. However, little is known about how common milk pasteurization and storage techniques affect this important bioactive protein.
Kathleen G. McClanahan +3 more
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Abstract Background Osteopontin (OPN) is an important breastmilk protein involved in infant intestinal, immunological, and brain development. However, little is known about how common milk pasteurization and storage techniques affect this important bioactive protein.
Kathleen G. McClanahan +3 more
openaire +1 more source
Prostaglandins, Leukotrienes and Essential Fatty Acids, 2022
Long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and the optimal n-6/n-3 fatty acids ratio are essential for proper neurodevelopment in infancy. This study aimed to evaluate the association between breastmilk fatty acid intake and maternal dietary intake, anthropometrics and breastmilk carotenoid levels.This observational, prospective study included 44 ...
M.A. Zielinska-Pukos +3 more
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Long chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) and the optimal n-6/n-3 fatty acids ratio are essential for proper neurodevelopment in infancy. This study aimed to evaluate the association between breastmilk fatty acid intake and maternal dietary intake, anthropometrics and breastmilk carotenoid levels.This observational, prospective study included 44 ...
M.A. Zielinska-Pukos +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Paths to understanding breastmilk
Science, 2020Development Breastfeeding is important for infant and maternal health. Some of the mechanisms that account for the benefits of breastmilk include improved nutritional and immune status, but much is still unknown about how breastmilk confers health benefits. In a Perspective, Bode et al. discuss paths to understanding the mother-breastmilk-infant triad.
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Unique content of breastmilk: neurotrophic growth factors in breastmilk at 2 years and beyond
European Journal of PediatricsThe aim of our study was to show the presence of neurotrophic factors in breast milk that have a significant impact on neurocognitive development of children aged two years and beyond. Mothers expressed at least 5 mL of breast milk into sterile containers when their children 18, 24, and ≥ 25 months of age, and then specimens were transferred to ...
Öykü Özbörü Aşkan +5 more
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The dilemma of breastmilk feeding.
Breastfeeding review : professional publication of the Nursing Mothers' Association of Australia, 2011Today, feeding expressed milk, usually by bottle, is being ‘normalised’. This mode of infant feeding has shifted from something needed in relatively few circumstances to the norm, with personal, family, industrial relations, and women’s rights implications.
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