Gut Microbiota
Microbiota is the good (and bad bacteria) in your gut. Every human being carries about 1-2kg of gut microbiota representing a number of cells far bigger than all our body cells together. Here we provide the latest science on the relation between nutrition, gut microbiome, immune system and human health.
NNIW96: Importance Of The Gut Microbiome In Preterm Infants
NNIW96: Selected Human Milk Oligosaccharides Added To Infant Formulas For Term Infants
NNIW96: Microbiota And HMOs In Preterm Infants
NNIW96: Human Milk Bioactives – Future Perspectives
Gut Talk Series: Probiotics and maternal nutrition
Bacteria do not colonize the gut before birth, says collaborative study
Microbiota-Directed Therapy May Aid Growth in Malnourished Kids
Children’s gut microbiota mature along similar trajectories, but at different speeds: Study
6th World Congress of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (WCPGHAN) 2021
HMO diversity impacts infant microbiota activity
Impact of HMO on toddler microbiota and its activity
Gut Talk Series: The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis and Nutrition
Gut Talk Series: Why and how gut microbiome is important for bone development
Gut Talk Series: Probiotics in toddlerhood: are they necessary?
Gut Talk Series: Respiratory infections in childhood and use of probiotics