ProbioticTreatment Of Diarrhoeal Disease And Malnutrition In Top End Aboriginal Children
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$332,036.00
Summary
Aboriginal children in the Top End of Australia have high rates of hospital admission for diarrhoea and malnutrition. We have discovered that underlying small intestinal damage in these children is an important contributor to the high complication rates and longer lengths of stay in hospital compared to non-Aboriginal children. This research proposes to continue our work on small intestinal damage by using two non-invasive tests of gut function, namely a sugar absorption test and novel breath te ....Aboriginal children in the Top End of Australia have high rates of hospital admission for diarrhoea and malnutrition. We have discovered that underlying small intestinal damage in these children is an important contributor to the high complication rates and longer lengths of stay in hospital compared to non-Aboriginal children. This research proposes to continue our work on small intestinal damage by using two non-invasive tests of gut function, namely a sugar absorption test and novel breath test. The sugar permeability test involves the children drinking a solution of the two sugars lactulose and rhamnose, and measuring their absorption into the blood 90 minutes later using a sophisticated measuring instrument called HPLC, which can measure minuscule amounts of sugars and is set up at Royal Darwin Hospital. The breath test involves children drinking another sugar solution with a special non-radioactive marker called a stable isotope of carbon, and measuring changes in the amount of this marker in carbon dioxide from the breath at timed periods after drinking the sugar solution. The breath is analysed in Adelaide using another sophisticated instrument. These tests are being used to measure abnormal sugar absorption due to intestinal damage, which is particularly common in Aboriginal children during the weaning period of 4-18 months. Our hypothesis is that treatment with 'healthy germs' (probiotics) like those in certain yoghourts will colonise the gut, stimulate immunity and reduce the presence of 'nasty germs' (pathogenic bacteria) in the intestines of Aboriginal children which contribute to the need for their hospitalisation with diarrhoea and malnutrition. If this hypothesis is correct, then this research will provide the best kind of evidence for reducing the need for hospital treatment by treating all cases of diarrhoea with these probiotics and possibly even decreasing the gut damage of children in the weaning period by including probiotics in their dietsRead moreRead less
The Use Of Probiotics To Reduce The Incidence Of Sepsis In Premature Infants.
Funder
National Health and Medical Research Council
Funding Amount
$808,733.00
Summary
Currently, premature infants are born without the normal immune defenses of infants born at the correct time because the protective factors that normally pass from the mother to the baby during the last few months of pregnancy have not had time to do so. In addition the tiny premature infants are at risk because they need the expertise of intensive care and are therefore separated from their parents and their parents' organisms which healthy term infants normally pick up from the birth canal and ....Currently, premature infants are born without the normal immune defenses of infants born at the correct time because the protective factors that normally pass from the mother to the baby during the last few months of pregnancy have not had time to do so. In addition the tiny premature infants are at risk because they need the expertise of intensive care and are therefore separated from their parents and their parents' organisms which healthy term infants normally pick up from the birth canal and their parents skin. The infants commonly develop infections from organisms living on their skin surfaces or inside their lungs, stomach or bowels. The babies are living in a hospital environment which they need to survive, but they may pick up particularly unhealthy organisms (pathogens) that produce toxins, which are difficult to treat even with antibiotics. These infections are so severe that one-fifth of the babies die, even in Australia where facilities for premature infants are excellent. Two recent studies overseas have shown that giving premature babies special preparations of certain probiotic organisms decreases the chance of babie developing infections. Probiotics are organisms that have health benefits. Probiotics tighten the spaces between cells to stop bacteria getting into the body, produce substances that kill other bacteria and promote the production of immunoglobulin A by the baby's own cells. Immunoglobulin A is a substance that lines the bowel wall and protects the baby from invasion by bacteria. This study will offer this probiotic product to very premature babies in a trial to see if it produces additional benefits for our babies in Victoria. Around five hundred babies will be given the product and five hundred will be given the placebo ( a harmless inert product which will look just like the real probiotic). Currently 23% of our babies get the serious infections and this study is powerful enough to see if we can reduce the number by one third.Read moreRead less
Previous research has shown that SIDS victims have a number of subtle abnormalities that set them apart from the normal population. These include the occurrence of upper airway obstruction in sleep, a reduced ability to awaken from sleep and abnormalities of the automatic control of heart rate and blood pressure in sleep. These body functions are controlled by a component of the brain called the autonomic nervous system which controls the heart and other internal functions by means of nerves cal ....Previous research has shown that SIDS victims have a number of subtle abnormalities that set them apart from the normal population. These include the occurrence of upper airway obstruction in sleep, a reduced ability to awaken from sleep and abnormalities of the automatic control of heart rate and blood pressure in sleep. These body functions are controlled by a component of the brain called the autonomic nervous system which controls the heart and other internal functions by means of nerves called the parasymmpathetic and sympathetic systems. The purpose of this project is to undertake studies of the autonomic system in normal infants and in those infants who are considered to be at risk for SIDS. As SIDS occurs almost exclusively in sleep it is important to study the infant?s heart rate and blood pressure responses to various challenges whilst asleep. All infants (both controls and subjects) enrolled in the protocol will therefore undergo overnight sleep studies during which their automatic responses to a variety of stimuli will be measured. Once we have established the normal response to these stimuli we can then compare them to the results of the at risk group. If, as we anticipate, there is a difference between our at risk group and the normal controls in automatic function then we will measure some of the stress hormones in the body which reflect the function of the autonomic nervous system. If there is a difference in the levels of these hormones between the normal and the at risk groups which correlates with the expected subtle abnormalities in function we may be able to devise an accessible and quantifiable measure for those infants at risk of SIDSRead moreRead less