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.
Origins: Early-life solutions to the modern health crisis
Cancer Therapy-Induced Mucositis: Where Are We Now?
NNIW87 - Complementary feeding: Building the Foundations for Healthy Life
Prevention of Allergic Diseases Through Early Nutrition
Foods Consumed at Lunch and Their Contribution to Energy and Nutrient Intakes in U.S. Children and Adolescents
Contribution of the Intestinal Microbiota to Human Health and Disease
NNIW52 - Micronutrient Deficiencies in the First Months of Life
Integrating Nutrition into Cancer Treatment
The Nest 33: Nutrition in Childhood: Latest Updates
Intrauterine and Early Postnatal Nutrition: Long-Term Outcome
The Nest 32: Gastro-Intestinal Disturbances in Infancy and Childhood
Infantile Colic: What do you know about it?
NNIW11 - Nutritional Management of Diabetes Mellitus and the Dysmetabolic Syndrome