The unrevealed links: periodontal health, human milk composition, and infant gut microbiome dynamics.

Rana Badewy, Michael Glogauer, Kristin L Connor, Michael Sgro, Jim Yuan Lai, Richard P Bazinet, Howard C Tenenbaum, Amir Azarpazhooh
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Abstract

Aim: This review aims to identify the mechanistic relationships related to periodontal diseases and its possible association with changes in human milk composition and the composition and function of infants' gut microbiome.

Background: Maternal health conditions, especially inflammatory, are associated with altered human milk composition. It is not known whether maternal oral inflammatory diseases, including periodontal diseases, deleteriously affect human milk composition.

Methods: A narrative review was conducted according to SANRA, the Scale for the Assessment of Narrative Review Articles, guidelines. PubMed, Google Scholar, and Cochrane database of systematic reviews were searched from September 2019 up to December 2023 using keywords such as breast/human milk, maternal health/infections, and periodontal diseases. Reference lists of relevant articles were also screened. Our primary outcome of interest was human milk composition (i.e., any changes in macronutrients, immunological components, etc.). Secondary outcomes included changes in human milk microbiome and subsequent changes in the infant gut microbiome. Outcomes were synthesized using a narrative approach where the existing evidence and current literature were summarized. No risk of bias assessment of the studies was performed in this review.

Findings: The search yielded no studies investigating the relationship between periodontal diseases in nursing mothers and changes in human milk composition. However, a dose-response relationship exists between the severity of periodontal diseases and the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes such as preterm birth. Mastitis and diabetes affected milk lipids. Immunoglobulin A (sIgA) was increased in mastitis, whereas reduced concentrations were reported in diabetes. Potential biological pathways through which periodontal diseases can negatively affect human milk composition include the systemic dissemination of inflammatory cytokines like IL-6, PGE2, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-β that can be up-regulated by bacterial by-products. This biological plausibility needs to be investigated, given the potentially negative impact on the quality of human milk that could be caused by periodontal inflammation.

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未揭示的联系:牙周健康、母乳成分和婴儿肠道微生物群动态。
目的:本综述旨在确定与牙周疾病有关的机理关系及其与母乳成分变化和婴儿肠道微生物组的组成和功能可能存在的关联:背景:产妇的健康状况,尤其是炎症,与母乳成分的改变有关。母体口腔炎症性疾病(包括牙周病)是否会对母乳成分产生有害影响尚不清楚:方法:根据 SANRA(叙事性综述文章评估量表)指南进行叙事性综述。使用母乳/人乳、孕产妇健康/感染和牙周疾病等关键词,检索了2019年9月至2023年12月期间的PubMed、谷歌学术和Cochrane系统综述数据库。同时还筛选了相关文章的参考文献列表。我们关注的主要结果是母乳成分(即常量营养素、免疫成分等的任何变化)。次要结果包括母乳微生物组的变化以及婴儿肠道微生物组的后续变化。研究结果采用叙述式方法进行综合,对现有证据和当前文献进行总结。本综述未对研究进行偏倚风险评估:检索结果显示,没有研究调查了哺乳期母亲牙周疾病与母乳成分变化之间的关系。然而,牙周病的严重程度与早产等不良妊娠结局的风险之间存在剂量反应关系。乳腺炎和糖尿病会影响乳脂。乳腺炎患者的免疫球蛋白 A(sIgA)会升高,而糖尿病患者的免疫球蛋白 A 浓度会降低。牙周病可能对母乳成分产生负面影响的潜在生物学途径包括炎性细胞因子(如 IL-6、PGE2 和肿瘤坏死因子 (TNF)-β 等)的全身传播,而细菌的副产品可能会上调这些细胞因子。鉴于牙周炎症可能会对母乳质量造成负面影响,因此有必要对这种生物合理性进行研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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