TY - JOUR
T1 - The Microbiome and Preterm Birth
T2 - A Change in Paradigm with Profound Implications for Pathophysiologic Concepts and Novel Therapeutic Strategies
AU - Staude, Birte
AU - Oehmke, Frank
AU - Lauer, Tina
AU - Behnke, Judith
AU - Göpel, Wolfgang
AU - Schloter, Michael
AU - Schulz, Holger
AU - Krauss-Etschmann, Susanne
AU - Ehrhardt, Harald
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2018 Birte Staude et al.
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Preterm birth poses a global challenge with a continuously increasing disease burden during the last decades. Advances in understanding the etiopathogenesis did not lead to a reduction of prematurely born infants so far. A balanced development of the host microbiome in early life is key for the maturation of the immune system and many other physiological functions. With the tremendous progress in new diagnostic possibilities, the contribution of microbiota changes to preterm birth and the acute and long-Term sequelae of prematurity have come into the research focus. This review summarizes the latest advances in the understanding of microbiomes in the amniotic cavity and the female lower genital tract and how changes in microbiota structures contribute to pretermdelivery.Theexhibition of these highly vulnerable infants to the hostile environment in the neonatal intensive care unit necessarily entails the rapid colonization with a nonbalanced microbiome in a situation where the organism is still very prone and at an early stage of development. The global research efforts to decipher pathologic changes will pave the way to new pre-and postnatal therapeutic concepts.
AB - Preterm birth poses a global challenge with a continuously increasing disease burden during the last decades. Advances in understanding the etiopathogenesis did not lead to a reduction of prematurely born infants so far. A balanced development of the host microbiome in early life is key for the maturation of the immune system and many other physiological functions. With the tremendous progress in new diagnostic possibilities, the contribution of microbiota changes to preterm birth and the acute and long-Term sequelae of prematurity have come into the research focus. This review summarizes the latest advances in the understanding of microbiomes in the amniotic cavity and the female lower genital tract and how changes in microbiota structures contribute to pretermdelivery.Theexhibition of these highly vulnerable infants to the hostile environment in the neonatal intensive care unit necessarily entails the rapid colonization with a nonbalanced microbiome in a situation where the organism is still very prone and at an early stage of development. The global research efforts to decipher pathologic changes will pave the way to new pre-and postnatal therapeutic concepts.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85055319973&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1155/2018/7218187
DO - 10.1155/2018/7218187
M3 - Article
C2 - 30370305
AN - SCOPUS:85055319973
SN - 2314-6133
VL - 2018
JO - BioMed Research International
JF - BioMed Research International
M1 - 7218187
ER -