Antibiotics’ overuse alters child development

Antibiotics’ overuse alters child development

FPJ BureauUpdated: Saturday, June 01, 2019, 12:26 AM IST
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Mother giving 2 years old baby boy medicine, cough syrup on a spoon. Sick child.; Shutterstock ID 65331178; PO: The Huffington Post; Job: The Huffington Post; Client: The Huffington Post; Other: The Huffington Post |

The study found that high-dose of antibiotics had long-lasting effect on weight gain and bone growth 

New York : Repeated use of common antibiotics may have a significant effect on a child’s development and cause side effects such as weight gain and growth of larger bones, a new study in mice has warned, reports PTI.

In the study, female mice treated with two classes of widely used childhood antibiotics gained more weight and developed larger bones than untreated mice. Both of the antibiotics also disrupted the gut microbiome, the trillions of microbes that inhabit the intestinal tract, researchers found.

Overall, the mice received three short courses of amoxicillin (a broad-spectrum

antibiotic), tylosin (which isn’t used in children but

represents another common antibiotic class called the macrolides, which is increasingly popular in pediatrics), or a mixture of both drugs.

To mimic the effects of paediatric antibiotic use, the researchers gave the animals the same number of prescriptions and the same therapeutic dose that the average child receives in the first two years of life. A control group of mice received no drugs at all.

Martin Blaser, director of the New York University Human Microbiome Programme, and the study’s senior author, said the results agree with multiple other studies pointing towards significant effects on children exposed to antibiotics early in life.

He noted that the cumulative data could help shape guidelines governing the duration and type of paediatric prescriptions. “We have been using antibiotics as if there was no biological cost,” said Blaser.

The study supports previous research by Blaser’s group suggesting that antibiotic exposure during a critical window of early development disrupts the bacterial landscape of the gut and permanently reprogrammes the body’s metabolism, setting up a predisposition for obesity.

The new study found that short, high-dose pulses of tylosin had the most pronounced and long-lasting effect on weight gain, while amoxicillin had the biggest effect on bone growth – a prerequisite for increased height. Based on extensive DNA sequencing data, the study showed that both antibiotics also disrupted the gut microbiome.

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