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The Effect of Probiotic Supplement on Urinary D-lactic Acid Level in Newborns

H

H. Tolga Çelik

Status

Completed

Conditions

Antibiotic Side Effect

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04620629
KA-19134

Details and patient eligibility

About

It is thought that prophylactic enteral probiotics in newborns may play a role in the prevention of infection and NEC-related morbidity by preventing bacterial migration in the mucosa, reducing their number by competing with pathogenic bacteria, providing microbial balance, and increasing intestinal immunity.

In our study, it was determined to detect normal D-lactic acid levels in urine in late premature (babies born after 34 weeks of gestation) and term babies, to show the negative effect of antibiotic treatment on the intestinal flora indirectly by measuring urinary D-lactic acid, and the probiotic support in babies using antibiotics was disrupted. The investigators aim to investigate hypothesis that it will have a corrective effect on the intestinal flora by comparing urinary D-lactic acid levels.

Full description

Lactic acid exists as two optical isomers, L-lactic acid and D-lactic acid. These isomers are metabolized to or synthesized from pyruvate by the action of isomer-specific enzymes (L-lactate dehydrogenase and D-lactate dehydrogenase). Mammals, including humans, do not possess D-lactate dehydrogenase, and therefore D-lactate production in human tissue is very limited. The endogenous single D-lactate synthesis known in man is carried out by glyoxalase. In this pathway, methylglyoxal is converted into D-lactate by the enzymes glyoxalase-1 and glyoxalase-2. Due to this restricted production, the blood D-lactate level in healthy people is so low that L-lactate is the major physiological enantiomer of lactate in the human body.

The bacterial flora in the human gastrointestinal tract has the ability to produce L and / or D-lactate depending on the amount of L-LDH and D-LDH present. Some strains of bacteria have the enzyme DL-lactate racemase to convert one isomer to another. Therefore, racemization reactions can further increase the amount of D-lactate isomers present in the column. Although there is no D-lactate dehydrogenase enzyme in humans, D-Lactate is metabolized into pyruvate by the enzyme D-2-hydroxy acid dehydrogenase (D-2-HDH), an intramitochondrial flavoprotein with high activity in the liver and renal cortex. The kidney's threshold for D-lactate is much lower than L-lactate and is efficiently excreted in urine as well as metabolic clearance. Thus, under normal conditions, D-lactate produced by tissue metabolism or bacterial fermentation in the gut; It does not cause a clinically significant increase in lactate in blood, urine or feces.

D-lactic acidosis is a well-defined complication of short bowel syndrome due to the combination of altered gastrointestinal tract anatomy and abnormal bacterial flora. Many case reports reported in the literature are associated with short bowel syndrome secondary to various causes. There are studies investigating the effects of fermented formulas and probiotics on D-lactic acid in healthy babies. In these studies, no increased risk for D-lactic acidosis was found in healthy infants fed with probiotic supplemented formulas.

Considering the studies on newborns; In babies with necrotizing enterocolit, it has been shown that urinary D-lactate excretion increased as a result of increased enteric bacterial activity. In another study, plasma D-lactic acid level was found to be high in premature babies with necrotizing enterocolitis. However, more detailed studies on newborns are needed.

Enrollment

71 patients

Sex

All

Ages

1 to 28 days old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Late preterm and term babies
  • Babies who are fed only breast milk and / or formula with breast milk
  • Babies who have to be given formula support in the early period because they cannot receive breast milk or are not sufficient in the neonatal period, therefore probiotic support is started and continues
  • Babies whose antibiotic treatment is started in the neonatal period
  • Babies whose parents consent to participate in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy
  • Babies with urinary tract infections
  • Babies with a history of premature rupture of membranes
  • Chromosomal abnormality
  • Those with major congenital anomaly, gastrointestinal system anomaly
  • Presence of any known immunodeficiency,

Trial design

71 participants in 3 patient groups

control group
Description:
Late premature and term babies without any disease
probiotic group
Description:
Babies whose probiotic support is started and continues because they cannot receive breast milk, and whose antibiotic treatment is started in the neonatal period.
antibiotic group
Description:
Babies who receives antibiotic treatment in the neonatal period and does not receive probiotic support before.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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