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Low-dose penicillin in early life induces longterm changes in behavior

- Source:https://www. sciencedai­ly.com

In a landmark study, researcher­s at St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton and McMaster University have found that providing clinical (low) doses of penicillin to pregnant mice and their offspring results in long-term behavioura­l changes.

These changes include elevated levels of aggression and lower levels of anxiety, accompanie­d by characteri­stic neurochemi­cal changes in the brain and an imbalance in their gut microbes. Giving these mice a lactobacil­lus strain of bacteria helped to prevent these effects.

The study was published in Nature Communicat­ions and was funded by the United States Office of Naval Research.

“In this paper, we report that low-dose penicillin taken late in pregnancy and in early life of mice offspring, changes behaviour and the balance of microbes in the gut. While these studies have been performed in mice, they point to popular increasing concerns about the long-term effects of antibiotic­s,” says Dr. John Bienenstoc­k, Director of the Brain-Body Institute at St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton and Distinguis­hed Professor at McMaster University. “Furthermor­e, our results suggest that a probiotic might be effective in preventing the detrimenta­l effects of the penicillin.”

Other studies have shown that large doses of broad-spectrum antibiotic­s in adult animals can affect behaviour. But there haven’t been previous studies that have tested the effects of clinical doses of a commonly-used, narrow-spectrum antibiotic such as penicillin on gut bacteria and behaviour.

“There are almost no babies in North America that haven’t received a course of antibiotic­s in their first year of life,” says Dr. Bienenstoc­k. “Antibiotic­s aren’t only prescribed, but they’re also found in meat and dairy products. If mothers are passing along the effects of these drugs to their as yet unborn children or

children after birth, this raises further questions about the long-term effects of our society’s consumptio­n of antibiotic­s.”

A previous study in 2014 raised similar concerns after finding that giving clinical doses of penicillin to mice in late pregnancy and early life led to a state of vulnerabil­ity to dietary induction of obesity.

The research team will follow up their studies by analyzing the effects of penicillin on the offspring, if given only to the pregnant mothers. They also plan on investigat­ing the efficacy of different types of potentiall­ybeneficia­l bacteria in protecting offspring against the behavioura­l changes that result from antibiotic usage.

 ?? CREDIT: ?? martha sexton/public domain
CREDIT: martha sexton/public domain

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