Journal ArticleOpen Access
Bifidobacterial Dominance of the Gut in Early Life and Acquisition of Antimicrobial Resistance
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of California, Davis, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Western Human Nutrition Research Center
Published InmSphere
Year2018
Citations118
Abstract
Infants are vulnerable to an array of infectious diseases, and as the gut microbiome may serve as a reservoir of AMR for pathogens, reducing the levels of AMR in infants is important to infant health. This study demonstrates that high levels of Bifidobacterium are associated with reduced levels of AMR in early life and suggests that probiotic interventions to increase infant Bifidobacterium levels have the potential to reduce AMR in infants. However, this effect is not sustained at year 2 of age in Bangladeshi infants, underscoring the need for more detailed studies of the biogeography and timing of infant AMR acquisition.
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