2016
DOI: 10.1017/s0029665116000999
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Infant feeding practices, growth and metabolic development

Abstract: Exclusive breastfeeding is the recommended infant feeding practice and is associated with the highest standard of growth and health (1) . However, the exact mechanisms that define infant health outcomes are poorly understood, partly due to challenges with biofluid collection in this vulnerable population group. Urine metabolomic profiles offer enormous opportunities in infant nutrition research due to the non-invasive nature of sample collection and ability to characterise diet and phenotype related differenc… Show more

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“…What is required for this purpose is a measure involving both a simple sample collection and biochemical assay that would clearly differentiate between infants receiving any breast milk from those only receiving infant formula. Another group has studied metabolomic patterns in urine in breastfeeding children, but although these show clearly different patterns at different ages, it is not clear if these could be used to discriminate between breastfeeding and infant formula feeding infants (Lafferty, O'Regan, O'Shea, McAuliffe, & O'Sullivan, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…What is required for this purpose is a measure involving both a simple sample collection and biochemical assay that would clearly differentiate between infants receiving any breast milk from those only receiving infant formula. Another group has studied metabolomic patterns in urine in breastfeeding children, but although these show clearly different patterns at different ages, it is not clear if these could be used to discriminate between breastfeeding and infant formula feeding infants (Lafferty, O'Regan, O'Shea, McAuliffe, & O'Sullivan, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%