2008
DOI: 10.1159/000146245
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Factors Influencing the Establishment of the Intestinal Microbiota in Infancy

Abstract: The establishment of the intestinal microbiota commences at birth and new bacteria establish in succession during the first years of life until an adult-type highly complex microbiota has been achieved. The first bacteria to establish in the neonatal gut are usually aerobic or facultatively anaerobic bacteria, like enterobacteria, enterococci and staphylococci. During their growth they consume oxygen and change the intestinal milieu making it suitable for the proliferation of anaerobic bacteria. Bifidobacteriu… Show more

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Cited by 78 publications
(75 citation statements)
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References 98 publications
(126 reference statements)
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“…The diffusion of oxygen inward from the ileostomy port could be sufficient to inhibit growth of the strict anaerobes, thus allowing the facultative anaerobes to predominate. An oxygen-dependent microbiota transition is well documented in studies from infants showing the succession from early colonization with facultative anaerobes to late colonization with strict anaerobes (12,29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The diffusion of oxygen inward from the ileostomy port could be sufficient to inhibit growth of the strict anaerobes, thus allowing the facultative anaerobes to predominate. An oxygen-dependent microbiota transition is well documented in studies from infants showing the succession from early colonization with facultative anaerobes to late colonization with strict anaerobes (12,29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…In the present study, we did not identify any correlation of enterotype with diet or BMI. No data on antibiotic treatment were collected for the cohort; however, since antibiotic treatment is known to induce major changes in the composition of the infant gut microbiota (60,83,84), it cannot be excluded that antibiotic usage prior to 18-or 36-month samplings influenced the observed shifts. Nevertheless, our results (Fig.…”
Section: Figmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Owing to their microbial activities in the gut, the primary colonizers generated conditions suitable for colonization by other species, known as the secondary colonizers (i.e., autogenic succession). 3 Additional changes were enforced in the composition of this early microbial community by external, non-microbial factors (i.e., allogenic succession). Th e increases in complexity of the various autogenic and allogenic interactions contributed to the generation of a stable microfl ora and a…”
Section: The Primitive Gut and The Origin Of The Microfloramentioning
confidence: 99%