The mode of delivery affects the diversity and colonization pattern of the gut microbiota during the first year of infants' life: a systematic review
Anhui Medical University · Anhui Provincial Center for Disease Control and Prevention
Abstract
The human gut is the habitat for diverse and dynamic microbial ecosystem. The human microbiota plays a critical role in functions that sustain health and is a positive asset in host defenses. Establishment of the human intestinal microbiota during infancy may be influenced by multiple factors including delivery mode. Present review compiles existing evidences on the effect of delivery mode on the diversity and colonization pattern of infants gut microbiota.
Two investigators searched for relevant scientific publications from four databases (Pubmed, Medline, Embase, and Web of Science). The last search was performed on September 21, 2015, using key terms ((delivery mode OR caesarean delivery OR cesarean section OR vaginal delivery) AND (gut microbiota OR gut microbiome OR gut microflora OR intestinal microflora OR microbial diversity) AND (infants OR children)). All included studies described at least two types of gut microbiota in relation to delivery mode (caesarean section vs vaginal delivery) and used fecal samples to detect gut microbiota.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 26.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 60
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Colonization
- Medicine
- Diversity (politics)
- Hepatology
- Gut flora
- Internal medicine
- Ecology
- Immunology
- Life in Land