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Neonatal antibiotic exposure impairs child growth during the first six years of life by perturbing intestinal microbial colonization

Medicine and Health

Neonatal antibiotic exposure impairs child growth during the first six years of life by perturbing intestinal microbial colonization

A. Uzan-yulzari, O. Turtā, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Atara Uzan-Yulzari and colleagues uncovers the unexpected long-term effects of neonatal antibiotic treatment on children's growth. With boys showing significant growth impairment while girls remained unaffected, the implications for early antibiotic use could reshape pediatric care. Discover how these findings connect gut health and growth in children.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Exposure to antibiotics in the first days of life is thought to affect various physiological aspects of neonatal development. Here, we investigate the long-term impact of antibiotic treatment in the neonatal period and early childhood on child growth in an unselected birth cohort of 12,422 children born at full term. We find significant attenuation of weight and height gain during the first 6 years of life after neonatal antibiotic exposure in boys, but not in girls, after adjusting for potential confounders. In contrast, antibiotic use after the neonatal period but during the first 6 years of life is associated with significantly higher body mass index throughout the study period in both boys and girls. Neonatal antibiotic exposure is associated with significant differences in the gut microbiome, particularly in decreased abundance and diversity of fecal Bifidobacterium at 2 years of age. Finally, we demonstrate that fecal microbiota transplant from antibiotic-exposed children to germ-free male, but not female, mice results in significant growth impairment. Thus, we conclude that neonatal antibiotic exposure is associated with a long-term gut microbiome perturbation and may result in reduced growth in boys during the first six years of life while antibiotic use later in childhood is associated with increased body mass index.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jan 26, 2021
Authors
Atara Uzan-Yulzari, Olli Turtā, Anna Belogolovski, Oren Ziv, Christina Kunz, Sarah Perschbacher, Hadar Neuman, Edoardo Pasolli, Aia Oz, Hila Ben-Amram, Himanshu Kumar, Helena Ollila, Anne Kaljonen, Erika Isolauri, Seppo Salminen, Hanna Lagström, Nicola Segata, Itai Sharon, Yoram Louzoun, Regina Ensenauer, Samuli Rautava, Omry Koren
Tags
neonatal antibiotics
child growth
gut microbiome
Bifidobacterium
BMI
long-term effects
pediatric health
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