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.
Human Milk: Composition, Clinical Benefits and Future Opportunities
Human Milk MicroRNAs/Exosomes: Composition and Biological Effects
Early Life Nutrition and Cognitive Development
Early Life Nutrition and Immune Development
Early Life Nutrition and Microbiome Development
Human Milk and Clinical Outcomes in Preterm Infants
Next Generation of Milk’s Benefits: Behavioural Outcomes
Oligosaccharides: Next Generation Functions
Guiding Development – Lessons from Mammalia
Milk’s Structural Dynamics: Nutrient Delivery System
Protein Requirements for the Critically Ill Patient With Renal/Liver Failure: Evidence Update
Omega 3 helps the gut stay healthy, study finds
Individualized diets for irritabel bowel syndrome better than placebo
NNIW88 - Intestinal Microbiome: Functional Aspects in Health and Disease
Microbiome Research - Current Success and Further Challenges