Naturally  born babies have more bacterial protection than those born by  caesarean. Children born by caesarean section more likely to suffer from  allergies such as asthma because they pick up less 'natural immunity'  from their mother, a study suggests.
Researchers believe  this is because, unlike babies born naturally, they do not acquire  beneficial bacteria as they pass down the birth canal.
The findings come at a time when caesarean rates are increasing, accounting for more than one in four births in the UK.
This  is mainly for medical reasons because of older mothers and obesity but  also because some mothers choose to have a caesarean.
Earlier  research found that babies delivered by caesarean section are at more  than twice the risk of developing food allergies than children born  naturally.
They are also significantly more likely to suffer diarrhoea and may be at increased danger of asthma later in life.
The  latest study, led by the University of Puerto Rico and University of  Colorado, showed that babies delivered naturally had bacterial  communities resembling their mother's birth canal, while caesarean  section newborns had common skin bacterial communities.
Researchers  believe many of the different microbial communities residing on humans –  each of which is personally unique – may help protect individuals from  various diseases.
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences study included nine women from 21 to 33 years old and 10 newborns.
The  babies were sampled within 24 hours of birth by swabbing their mouths  and skin and by taking samples from their upper throats and intestines.
The research team then used a powerful gene sequencing technique to simultaneously analyse all of the bacteria.
The  new study has allowed the researchers "to capture the first moments in  time" of infant bacterial communities, said Elizabeth Costello, the  co-author.
"The challenge now is to fill in the rest of the story  by tracking microbial communities in infants to toddlers to children  and adults over weeks, months and years to see how they evolve and  change," she said. ( telegraph.co.uk)
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