Bacterial load in meconium

The spike‐in plasmid method was utilized to perform an analysis on meconium and second‐pass feces, yielding both relative and absolute quantitative results. With the absolute quantitative data, the abundance of bacteria in 17 meconium samples and 17 second‐pass fecal samples were found to be 1.14 × ...

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Published iniMeta Vol. 3; no. 1; pp. e173 - n/a
Main Authors Jin, Wen‐Yu, Peng, Jing, Dai, Jinping, Tang, Rongkang, Guo, Jia‐Xin, Zhao, Huan, Wang, Jielin, Zhang, Shu, Gao, Yi‐Zhou
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Australia John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.02.2024
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Wiley
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Summary:The spike‐in plasmid method was utilized to perform an analysis on meconium and second‐pass feces, yielding both relative and absolute quantitative results. With the absolute quantitative data, the abundance of bacteria in 17 meconium samples and 17 second‐pass fecal samples were found to be 1.14 × 107 and 1.59 × 109 copies/g, respectively. The mode of delivery can significantly influence the alterations and compositions of gut bacteria in a newborn within 72 h.
Bibliography:Wen‐Yu Jin and Jing Peng contributed equally to this study.
ObjectType-Article-1
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ISSN:2770-596X
2770-5986
2770-596X
DOI:10.1002/imt2.173