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Enteral Plasma Feeding Improves Gut Function and Immunity in Piglets After Birth Asphyxia

Overview
Journal Pediatr Res
Specialties Biology
Pediatrics
Date 2024 Jul 21
PMID 39034356
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Abstract

Introduction: Birth asphyxia may negatively affect gut function and immunity in newborns. Conversely, immunomodulatory milk diets may protect the gut and immune system against damage caused by asphyxia. Using caesarean-derived pigs as models, we hypothesised that enteral feeding with plasma improves gut and immune functions in asphyxiated newborns.

Methods: Near-term pig fetuses (98% gestation,) were delivered by caesarean section after 8 min umbilical cord occlusion, leading to transient birth asphyxia (ASP, n = 75) and compared with non-occluded controls (CON, n = 69). Piglets were further randomised to supplementation with/without porcine plasma (plasma, PLA/vehicle, VEH), into bovine colostrum (first 24 h) or formula (until 72 h).

Results: Compared with CON, ASP piglets took longer to achieve stable respiration and showed reduced blood pH, weight gain and survival. Independent of asphyxia, plasma supplementation reduced gut haemorrhagic lesions, permeability and inflammatory cytokines together with improved villous morphology and brush-border enzyme activities. Asphyxia reduced blood cytokine responses to ex vivo bacterial stimulation, whereas plasma supplementation ameliorated this effect.

Conclusion: Dietary plasma supplementation improves survival, gut functions and immunity in both normal and asphyxiated newborns. The components in plasma that mediate gut-protective effects in piglets remain to be identified, but may benefit also birth-compromised newborn infants.

Impact: Complicated deliveries leading to birth asphyxia, may negatively affect gut, liver and immune adaptation in the first days after birth. Using a model of birth asphyxia in caesarean-derived piglets, we show that enteral feeding with maternal plasma exerts gut maturational and immunomodulatory effects in both control and asphyxiated animals in the first days of life. The mechanisms behind the gut-protective effects of plasma are unknown, but plasma components hold potential for new oral therapies for compromised newborn infants as well as piglets.

Citing Articles

Postnatal enteral plasma supplementation following birth asphyxia increases fluid retention and kidney health in newborn pigs.

Zhong J, Pankratova S, Doughty R, Flyger C, Sangild P, Skovgaard K Physiol Rep. 2025; 13(3):e70238.

PMID: 39910739 PMC: 11798866. DOI: 10.14814/phy2.70238.

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