Correlation between Gut Microbiome and Behavioral Problems in Children. Another Aspect of Gut Microbiome Is Now under the Microscope.


Gut microbiota (the bacterial population that lives in our intestine) can perform important services such as aiding digestion, manufacturing vitamins and combating infections. The most recent study discovered a link between the gut microbiome (the collection of genomes from all the bacteria in the gut) and behavioral disorders in children.

On January 21, 2020, a new study published in the journal mBio revealed that the functional and taxonomic composition of the gut microbiome interacts with behavior throughout a key phase of infant development. This groundbreaking study discovered that both socioeconomic risk exposure and child behaviors are linked to the relative abundances of specific taxa (e.g., Bacteroides and Bifidobacterium species) as well as functional modules encoded in their genomes (e.g., monoamine metabolism) that have been linked to cognition and health.


This study not only emphasizes the relationship between gut microbiota and cognition in kids, but it also emphasizes the critical function of caregivers in reducing the gut microbiome's link to environment and behaviors.


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