Breastmilk sugars differ in pregnant women on probiotics: Study
The
composition of breastmilk
changes in pregnant women on probiotics, a recent study suggests.
The
finding, published in the Journal of JAMA Pediatrics, upends what
scientists thought of human
milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) -- the sugar molecules
found exclusively in human breast milk -- and could lead to future
studies on how the compounds can be potentially influenced by diet
and other factors.
Though
HMOs are indigestible for a newborn child, they are consumed by
certain species in the microbiome and can significantly affect its
composition. As a result, scientists have begun focusing on HMOs as a
possible reason that infants who consume breastmilk are less likely
to get certain viral and bacterial infections, and other severe
conditions such as necrotizing enterocolitis, along with allergic
diseases like a food allergy.
The
study analysed data from 81 pregnant women who were enrolled in a
probiotic supplementation study in Finland. The researchers then
compared 20 different HMOs in the two groups of women -- those taking
probiotics and those that were not. Read
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