Human Milk: Its Components and Their Immunobiologic Functions
Book chapter, 2015

Whereas a neonate is born is sterile, immediate exposure to its mother's mucosal surfaces allows it to acquire microflora, which plays an important role in defense against potential pathogens. This initial stimulus helps the immature immune system of the newborn to develop the capacity to respond with specific immunologic tolerance while avoiding the development of allergic and autoimmune disease. Breast-feeding provides nutritional and developmental, along with anti-infectious, advantages to the infant. The significant protection conferred by breast-feeding against varied infections such as acute and prolonged diarrhea, neonatal septicemia, respiratory tract infections, acute and recurrent otitis media, and urinary tract infections is observed worldwide. Human breast milk contains numerous components, including antibodies, cytokines, hormones, enzymes, and major proteins with multiple activities (microbicidal, tumoricidal, anti-inflammatory, autoimmune, etc.). Breast-feeding can strikingly reduce infant mortality, as well as the fertility of the breast-feeding mother. In this manner, breast-feeding provides significant benefits for lactating mothers and their offspring, in addition to society as a whole. © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Human milk

Atopy

Anti-inflammatory

Neonate

Tumoricidal

Infant mortality

Microbicidal

Obesity

Author

Dolly Sharma

Lars Åke Hanson

University of Gothenburg

Marina Korotkova

University of Gothenburg

Esbjörn Telemo

University of Gothenburg

P. Ogra

Mucosal Immunology: Fourth Edition. Volume 2

2307-2341

Subject Categories

Immunology in the medical area

DOI

10.1016/B978-0-12-415847-4.00117-8

More information

Latest update

7/11/2019