Synbiotics Combined with Glutamine Stimulate Brain Development and the Immune System in Preterm Pigs

Preterm infants are born with an immature gut, brain, and immune system, predisposing them to short- and long-term complications. We hypothesized that a milk diet supplemented with pre- and probiotics (i.e. synbiotics) and glutamine would improve gut, brain, and immune maturation in preterm neonates...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of nutrition 2019-01, Vol.149 (1), p.36-45
Hauptverfasser: Andersen, Anders D, Nguyen, Duc Ninh, Langhorn, Louise, Renes, Ingrefid B, van Elburg, Ruurd M, Hartog, Anita, Tims, Sebastian, van de Looij, Yohan, Sangild, Per T, Thymann, Thomas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Preterm infants are born with an immature gut, brain, and immune system, predisposing them to short- and long-term complications. We hypothesized that a milk diet supplemented with pre- and probiotics (i.e. synbiotics) and glutamine would improve gut, brain, and immune maturation in preterm neonates, using preterm pigs as a model. Preterm pigs (Landrace x Yorkshire x Duroc, n = 40, delivered by c-section at 90% of gestation) were reared individually until day 23 after birth under highly standardized conditions. Piglets in the intervention group (PPG, n = 20) were fed increasing volumes of bovine milk supplemented with prebiotics (short-chain galacto- and long chain fructo-oligosaccharefides 9:1, 4–12 g/L), probiotics (Bifidobacterium breve M16-V, 3 × 109 CFU/d) and l-glutamine [0.15–0.30 g/(kg · d)], and compared with pigs fed bovine milk with added placebo compounds as control (CON, n = 20). Clinical, gastrointestinal, immunological, cognitive, and neurological endpoints were measured. The PPG pigs showed more diarrhea but weight gain, body composition, and gut parameters were similar between the groups. Cognitive performance, assessed in a T-maze, was significantly higher in PPG pigs (P 
ISSN:0022-3166
1541-6100
DOI:10.1093/jn/nxy243