Research
Good Bacteria
Part 1
Acidified milk formula supplemented with Bifidobacterium
lactis: impact on infant diarrhea in residential
care settings
Abstract
Chouraqui
JP, Van Egroo LD, Fichot MC.
Department
of Pediatrics, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Grenoble,
Grenoble, France.
OBJECTIVES:
Probiotics may be useful in preventing acute infectious
diarrhea. Bifidobacteria are particularly attractive
as probiotics agent because they constitute the predominant
colonic flora of breastfed infants and are thought to
play a role in the decreased incidence of diarrhea in
breastfed infants. METHODS: This was a multicenter,
double-blind, controlled study to evaluate the efficacy
of a milk formula supplemented with viable Bifidobacterium
lactis strain Bb 12 (BbF) in the prevention of
acute diarrhea in infants younger than 8 months living
in residential nurseries or foster care centers. RESULTS:
Ninety healthy children received either the BbF or a
conventional formula (CF) daily. The mean duration of
the stay in the residential center was similar (137
v 148 days). At enrollment, there were no differences
between the two groups with respect to age (3.7 +/-
2.1 months), gender, anthropometric data, history of
allergy or gastrointestinal disease, frequency of breast-feeding
in the neonatal period or timing of introduction of
solid food. Altogether, 28.3% of the BbF infants had
diarrhea during the study compared with 38.7% of controls
(NS). There was a statistically insignificant trend
for shorter episodes of diarrhea in the BbF group (5.1
+/- 3.3 days v 7 +/- 5.5 days, NS). The number of days
with diarrhea was 1.15 +/- 2.5 in the BbF group with
a daily probability of diarrhea of 0.84 versus 2.3 +/-
4.5 days and 1.55, respectively, in the CF group (P
= 0.0002 and 0.0014). Feeding infants with the BbF reduced
their risk of getting diarrhea by a factor of 1.9 (range,
1.33-2.6). Analysis of the cumulative incidence of diarrheal
episodes showed a trend that the first onset of diarrhea
occurred later in the BbF group. CONCLUSION: These results
provide some evidence that viable Bifidobacterium
lactis strain Bb 12, added to an acidified infant
formula, has some protective effect against acute diarrhea
in healthy children.
Reference:
J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr. 2004 Mar;38(3):288-92
Next
- Back to Table of Contents
for Good Bacteria, Part 1
|
|