Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs. / Cao, Muqing; Andersen, Anders Daniel; Van Ginneken, Chris; Shen, René Liang; Petersen, Stine Ostenfeldt; Thymann, Thomas; Jing, Jin; Sangild, Per Torp.

In: Pediatric Research, Vol. 78, No. 2, 2015, p. 137-144.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Cao, M, Andersen, AD, Van Ginneken, C, Shen, RL, Petersen, SO, Thymann, T, Jing, J & Sangild, PT 2015, 'Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs', Pediatric Research, vol. 78, no. 2, pp. 137-144. https://doi.org/10.1038/pr.2015.73

APA

Cao, M., Andersen, A. D., Van Ginneken, C., Shen, R. L., Petersen, S. O., Thymann, T., Jing, J., & Sangild, P. T. (2015). Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs. Pediatric Research, 78(2), 137-144. https://doi.org/10.1038/pr.2015.73

Vancouver

Cao M, Andersen AD, Van Ginneken C, Shen RL, Petersen SO, Thymann T et al. Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs. Pediatric Research. 2015;78(2):137-144. https://doi.org/10.1038/pr.2015.73

Author

Cao, Muqing ; Andersen, Anders Daniel ; Van Ginneken, Chris ; Shen, René Liang ; Petersen, Stine Ostenfeldt ; Thymann, Thomas ; Jing, Jin ; Sangild, Per Torp. / Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs. In: Pediatric Research. 2015 ; Vol. 78, No. 2. pp. 137-144.

Bibtex

@article{60a581da1d534f28b290943c1b6fa9a0,
title = "Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Preterm infants show delayed development of motor function after birth. This may relate to functional immaturity of many organs, including the gut and brain. Using pigs as model for preterm infants, we hypothesized that early initiation of enteral feeding stimulates both gut growth and neonatal physical activity.METHODS: In experiment 1, preterm and term pigs were fed parenteral nutrition (PN) or PN plus bovine colostrum (BC, 16-64 ml/kg/d enterally) for 5 d. In experiment 2, preterm pigs were fed PN+BC or PN+formula for 5 d. In experiment 3, preterm pigs were fed BC, formula, or human milk (HM) for 10 d. Incubator home cage activity (HCA) was quantified by continuous camera recordings.RESULTS: Preterm birth was associated with reduced intestinal weight and HCA (experiment 1), and BC or formula supplementation increased intestinal weights and HCA (experiments 1+2). Enteral BC and HM feeding increased HCA, intestinal weights, and necrotizing enteritis resistance, relative to formula (experiment 3).CONCLUSION: Preterm pigs show decreased physical activity, and the first enteral feeds diet dependently stimulate both gut growth and physical activity. The effects may arise from maturation of digestive, metabolic, and neurological functions, including gut serotonin production, by the first enteral feeds and milk bioactive factors.Pediatric Research (2015); doi:10.1038/pr.2015.73.",
author = "Muqing Cao and Andersen, {Anders Daniel} and {Van Ginneken}, Chris and Shen, {Ren{\'e} Liang} and Petersen, {Stine Ostenfeldt} and Thomas Thymann and Jin Jing and Sangild, {Per Torp}",
note = "CURIS 2015 NEXS 193",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1038/pr.2015.73",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "137--144",
journal = "Pediatric Research",
issn = "0031-3998",
publisher = "nature publishing group",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Physical activity level is impaired and diet dependent in preterm newborn pigs

AU - Cao, Muqing

AU - Andersen, Anders Daniel

AU - Van Ginneken, Chris

AU - Shen, René Liang

AU - Petersen, Stine Ostenfeldt

AU - Thymann, Thomas

AU - Jing, Jin

AU - Sangild, Per Torp

N1 - CURIS 2015 NEXS 193

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - BACKGROUND: Preterm infants show delayed development of motor function after birth. This may relate to functional immaturity of many organs, including the gut and brain. Using pigs as model for preterm infants, we hypothesized that early initiation of enteral feeding stimulates both gut growth and neonatal physical activity.METHODS: In experiment 1, preterm and term pigs were fed parenteral nutrition (PN) or PN plus bovine colostrum (BC, 16-64 ml/kg/d enterally) for 5 d. In experiment 2, preterm pigs were fed PN+BC or PN+formula for 5 d. In experiment 3, preterm pigs were fed BC, formula, or human milk (HM) for 10 d. Incubator home cage activity (HCA) was quantified by continuous camera recordings.RESULTS: Preterm birth was associated with reduced intestinal weight and HCA (experiment 1), and BC or formula supplementation increased intestinal weights and HCA (experiments 1+2). Enteral BC and HM feeding increased HCA, intestinal weights, and necrotizing enteritis resistance, relative to formula (experiment 3).CONCLUSION: Preterm pigs show decreased physical activity, and the first enteral feeds diet dependently stimulate both gut growth and physical activity. The effects may arise from maturation of digestive, metabolic, and neurological functions, including gut serotonin production, by the first enteral feeds and milk bioactive factors.Pediatric Research (2015); doi:10.1038/pr.2015.73.

AB - BACKGROUND: Preterm infants show delayed development of motor function after birth. This may relate to functional immaturity of many organs, including the gut and brain. Using pigs as model for preterm infants, we hypothesized that early initiation of enteral feeding stimulates both gut growth and neonatal physical activity.METHODS: In experiment 1, preterm and term pigs were fed parenteral nutrition (PN) or PN plus bovine colostrum (BC, 16-64 ml/kg/d enterally) for 5 d. In experiment 2, preterm pigs were fed PN+BC or PN+formula for 5 d. In experiment 3, preterm pigs were fed BC, formula, or human milk (HM) for 10 d. Incubator home cage activity (HCA) was quantified by continuous camera recordings.RESULTS: Preterm birth was associated with reduced intestinal weight and HCA (experiment 1), and BC or formula supplementation increased intestinal weights and HCA (experiments 1+2). Enteral BC and HM feeding increased HCA, intestinal weights, and necrotizing enteritis resistance, relative to formula (experiment 3).CONCLUSION: Preterm pigs show decreased physical activity, and the first enteral feeds diet dependently stimulate both gut growth and physical activity. The effects may arise from maturation of digestive, metabolic, and neurological functions, including gut serotonin production, by the first enteral feeds and milk bioactive factors.Pediatric Research (2015); doi:10.1038/pr.2015.73.

U2 - 10.1038/pr.2015.73

DO - 10.1038/pr.2015.73

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25918838

VL - 78

SP - 137

EP - 144

JO - Pediatric Research

JF - Pediatric Research

SN - 0031-3998

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 138187876