2022
DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.202200132
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Ultra‐High Temperature Treatment and Storage of Infant Formula Induces Dietary Protein Modifications, Gut Dysfunction, and Inflammation in Preterm Pigs

Abstract: Scope: Ready-to-feed liquid infant formula is increasingly used for preterm infants when human milk is unavailable. These formulas are sterilized by ultra-high temperature treatment, but heating and storage may reduce bioactivity and increase formation of Maillard reaction products with potential negative consequences for immature newborns. Methods and results: Using preterm pigs as a model for sensitive newborn infants, the study tests the intestinal responses of feeding experimental liquid formula within 5 d… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The SUHT‐fed pigs showed 2‐folder higher levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines (TNF‐α, IL‐6) compared to pigs fed PAST, which implied an overall proinflammatory status that might be related to subclinical organ inflammation (e.g., gut and kidney). [ 29 ] Further, the total phagocytic capacity in these pigs was lower than in pigs fed PAST, mainly driven by lower neutrophil counts, and a similar trend was found in eosinophils. Neutrophils are the major innate cell subset and key effector of the neonatal innate immune defense, and the decreased neutrophil counts in SUHT could be explained by local inflammation, which would drag more neutrophil homing from the blood to the organs, including gut and kidney.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
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“…The SUHT‐fed pigs showed 2‐folder higher levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines (TNF‐α, IL‐6) compared to pigs fed PAST, which implied an overall proinflammatory status that might be related to subclinical organ inflammation (e.g., gut and kidney). [ 29 ] Further, the total phagocytic capacity in these pigs was lower than in pigs fed PAST, mainly driven by lower neutrophil counts, and a similar trend was found in eosinophils. Neutrophils are the major innate cell subset and key effector of the neonatal innate immune defense, and the decreased neutrophil counts in SUHT could be explained by local inflammation, which would drag more neutrophil homing from the blood to the organs, including gut and kidney.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…The negligible amounts of MRPs found in the circulation indicate that the differences in systemic immunity among the three groups are indirectly related to dietary MRP levels, probably via effects on the gut inflammatory status as previously described. [ 29 ]…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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