npr:
When children suffer from severe malnourishment, they don’t just lose weight.
The condition wreaks havoc on biological systems throughout the body — including the microbiome, the healthy bacteria and other microbes that live in our digestive tracts. Those bacteria number in the trillions in every person and include hundreds of different species. They’re essential for metabolism, bone growth, brain function, the immune system and other bodily functions.
In a study published Thursday in the peer-reviewed journal Science, scientists in a renowned microbiology lab at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, report the development of a specialized food designed to rehabilitate gut microbes in severely malnourished children, a treatment that should facilitate both their immediate and long-term recovery.
The food — a spoon-fed paste made from chickpeas, soy, peanuts, bananas and a blend of oils and micronutrients — was shown to substantially boost microbiome health.
A Mix Of These Foods Could Restore Healthy Microbes In Malnourished Kids
Photo: Olivia Falcigno/NPR
bluu66 liked this
laughteronsilverwings reblogged this from npr
laughteronsilverwings liked this
the-fangirling-life-chose-me reblogged this from npr pastel-mermaids-neon-unicorns liked this
art--bug liked this
jack333322 liked this
chimaeracabra reblogged this from npr
chimaeracabra liked this saerly liked this
npr posted this
- Show more notes
