Descrizione
Infant fecal Bifidobacterium spp. and B. longum levels at one month of age, excluding C-section births, are quantified to isolate the prebiotic effect from the confounding influence of delivery mode.
Figure 15
ChartSource Paper
Maternal Prebiotic Ingestion Increased the Number of Fecal Bifidobacteria in Pregnant Women but Not in Their Neonates Aged One Month.Cite This Figure
![Figure 15: Infant fecal Bifidobacterium spp. and B. longum levels at one month of age, excluding C-section births, are quantified to isolate the prebiotic effect from the confounding influence of delivery mode.]() > Source: Shinji Jinno et al. "Maternal Prebiotic Ingestion Increased the Number of Fecal Bifidobacteria in Pre." *Nutrients*, 2017. PMID: [28245628](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28245628/)
<figure> <img src="" alt="Infant fecal Bifidobacterium spp. and B. longum levels at one month of age, excluding C-section births, are quantified to isolate the prebiotic effect from the confounding influence of delivery mode." /> <figcaption>Figure 15. Infant fecal Bifidobacterium spp. and B. longum levels at one month of age, excluding C-section births, are quantified to isolate the prebiotic effect from the confounding influence of delivery mode.<br> Source: Shinji Jinno et al. "Maternal Prebiotic Ingestion Increased the Number of Fecal Bifidobacteria in Pre." <em>Nutrients</em>, 2017. PMID: <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28245628/">28245628</a></figcaption> </figure>