Publications by authors named "Noel T Mueller"

Background: Infants born via Cesarean section (C-section) often have a distinct gut microbiome and higher risks of atopic and immune-related conditions than vaginally delivered infants. We evaluated whether a microbiome-based program could shift gut microbiome composition and improve microbiome-associated health outcomes in C-section born infants.

Methods: This open-label, randomized, controlled trial included full-term C-section-born infants aged 0-3 months, randomized to an intervention (n = 25) or control arm (n = 29).

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Importance: People with type 2 diabetes and hypertension are at high risk for blood pressure-related cardiovascular events. Few trials have tested the blood pressure-lowering effects of dietary interventions other than weight loss in this population.

Objective: To determine the effects of dietary patterns and sodium reduction on blood pressure in adults with type 2 diabetes.

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There is growing interest in the use of microbial-seeding interventions to mitigate the impacts of prenatal antibiotics, C-section, and lack of breastfeeding on mother-child microbe sharing. However, the relative importance of maternal vaginal vs. fecal microbiota in this process is unclear.

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Objective: To examine gut microbiota diversity, composition and metabolites in relation to overall mass (OM), fat mass (FM) and lean soft tissue mass (LSTM) measured by dual x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) in 5-year-old children.

Methods: Mothers of the Gen3G cohort were enrolled prenatally in 2010-2013 in Quebec, Canada; 153 children from the cohort had data on gut microbiota and DXA scans at 5-6.4 years of age, and 140 also had plasma metabolite data.

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Background: Germ-free mice experiments indicate that human gut microbiota influence blood pressure (BP), but no studies have prospectively examined if infant gut microbiota affects their future childhood BP. We aim to investigate prospective associations of infant gut microbiota diversity and composition with childhood BP, examining effect measure modification by breastfeeding and mediation by a child's body mass index.

Methods And Results: In the Copenhagen Prospective Studies on Asthma in Childhood 2010 cohort, we measured infant gut microbiota (16S rRNA V4) at 1 week, 1 month, and 1 year and child BP at 3 and 6 years.

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Background: Prenatal exposure to cannabis (or more specifically, delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol [Δ9-THC]) has been consistently linked to low birthweight. Animal models further show that Δ9-THC is associated with rapid postnatal growth. Whether this association is modified by breastfeeding is unknown.

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Article Synopsis
  • A study was conducted to explore the link between prenatal and early-life exposure to anti-infectives and the risk of obesity in children at age 7, using data from a large Danish population registry.
  • Researchers found that children exposed to anti-infectives showed a significant increase in obesity prevalence, with exposure during infancy having a more pronounced effect compared to prenatal exposure.
  • The results indicate that the risk of obesity rises with the number of anti-infective prescriptions, suggesting a potential correlation between these medications taken early in life and childhood obesity.
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Objective: Gut microbes and microbe-dependent metabolites (eg, tryptophan-kynurenine-serotonin pathway metabolites) have been linked to systemic inflammation, but the microbiota-metabolite-inflammation axis remains uncharacterised in children. Here we investigated whether gut microbiota features and circulating metabolites (both microbe-dependent and non-microbe-dependent metabolites) associated with circulating inflammation markers in children.

Methods: We studied children from the prospective Gen3G birth cohort who had data on untargeted plasma metabolome (n=321 children; Metabolon platform), gut microbiota (n=147; 16S rRNA sequencing), and inflammation markers (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and tumour necrosis factor-α) measured at 5-7 years.

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  • Hypertensive disorders of pregnancy (HDP), like preeclampsia and gestational hypertension, significantly affect maternal and child health, prompting a study on the role of metal mixtures and vitamins in their development.
  • In a cohort study involving 1,386 participants, researchers assessed the levels of essential and nonessential metals and vitamins in early pregnancy, finding a complex relationship between these substances and the incidence of HDP.
  • The results indicated that higher levels of certain metals, like copper, were linked to lower odds of preeclampsia, while increased vitamin B levels were associated with higher odds of gestational hypertension, although these effects diminished after considering dietary influences.
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Spatial count data with an abundance of zeros arise commonly in disease mapping studies. Typically, these data are analyzed using zero-inflated models, which comprise a mixture of a point mass at zero and an ordinary count distribution, such as the Poisson or negative binomial. However, due to their mixture representation, conventional zero-inflated models are challenging to explain in practice because the parameter estimates have conditional latent-class interpretations.

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Background: Preeclampsia (PE) is a pregnancy-associated hypertension disorder with high morbidity and mortality. Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs)-molecules produced by gut microbes-have been associated with hypertension, yet their relation to PE remains uncertain.

Objectives: The aim was to review existing human studies that examined associations of the major SCFAs (acetate, propionate, butyrate) in pregnancy with PE development.

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Exposing C-section infants to the maternal vaginal microbiome, coined "vaginal seeding", partially restores microbial colonization. However, whether vaginal seeding decreases metabolic disease risk is unknown. Therefore, we assessed the effect of vaginal seeding of human infants on adiposity in a murine model.

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Food and nutrition-related factors have the potential to impact development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and quality of life for people with ASD, but gaps in evidence exist. On 10 November 2022, Tufts University's Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy and Food and Nutrition Innovation Institute hosted a 1-d meeting to explore the evidence and evidence gaps regarding the relationships of food and nutrition with ASD. This meeting report summarizes the presentations and deliberations from the meeting.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the relationship between gut microbiome diversity and fat distribution, particularly visceral fat, in older African Caribbean men.
  • Lower diversity in gut bacteria correlates with higher levels of visceral fat and body mass index (BMI).
  • The findings suggest that specific gut microbiota types are linked to both overall body fat and harmful fat accumulation, indicating potential metabolic implications for this population.
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Human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) consumption by the infant microbiota is positively associated with immune health. In this issue of Cell Host & Microbe, Buzun et al. report a mechanism for HMO digestion by Bacteroides fragilis and demonstrate how the same pathway works on intestinal mucus to establish long-term gut residency.

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The COVID-19 pandemic created an unprecedented global health crisis. Recent studies suggest that socially vulnerable communities were disproportionately impacted, although findings are mixed. To quantify social vulnerability in the US, many studies rely on the Social Vulnerability Index (SVI), a county-level measure comprising 15 census variables.

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Background: Mounting evidence indicates that although some plant-based diets are healthful, others are not. Changes in the gut microbiome and microbiome-dependent metabolites, such as trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO), may explain differential health effects of plant-based diets. However, human data are sparse on whether qualitatively distinct types of plant-based diets differentially affect gut microbiome diversity, composition, particularly at the species level, and/or metabolites.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the link between plastic bottle feeding and various health indicators in infants during their first year of life.
  • It involved 442 infants from the Nurture birth cohort, analyzing the impact of plastic bottle feeding frequency at 3 months on growth metrics and microbiota composition at 12 months.
  • Results showed that while plastic bottle feeding frequency affected fecal microbiota diversity and specific short-chain fatty acid levels, it did not lead to significant differences in overall growth measures, except for a slight impact on length-for-age.
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Background: Longitudinal measures of diet spanning pregnancy through adolescence are needed from a large, diverse sample to advance research on the effect of early-life nutrition on child health. The Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) Program, which includes 69 cohorts, >33,000 pregnancies, and >31,000 children in its first 7-y cycle, provides such data, now publicly available.

Objectives: This study aimed to describe dietary intake data available in the ECHO Program as of 31 August, 2022 (end of year 6 of Cycle 1) from pregnancy through adolescence, including estimated sample sizes, and to highlight the potential for future analyses of nutrition and child health.

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  • The study examines the impact of breastfeeding on beverage choices in infants during their first year, highlighting a link between breastfeeding and healthier beverage consumption.
  • Infants who were breastfed had significantly lower rates of consuming 100% juice and sugar-sweetened beverages compared to non-breastfed infants.
  • The findings suggest that promoting breastfeeding could be important in curbing early unhealthy beverage intake, which is crucial for better dietary health later in childhood.
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Objective: There is a secular trend towards earlier age of menarche in the US and globally. Earlier age at menarche (AAM) has been associated with metabolic disorders that increase risk for preterm delivery (PTD), yet no studies in the US have investigated whether AAM influences risk of PTD. This study tested the hypothesis that AAM is associated with PTD.

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