Probiotics and Pregnancy Bucyrus OH

Taking probiotics during pregnancy prevents obesity, according to a new study presented at the 17th European Congress on Obesity in May. According to researchers, one year after giving birth, women were less likely to become obese if they had taken probiotics starting from the first trimester of pregnancy.

Keith David Blair, MD
419-562-7676
725 N Sandusky Ave
Bucyrus, OH
Plinio E Velandia
(419) 468-4841
269 Portland Way S
Galion, OH
Omar F s Guimaraes
(419) 342-2900
24 Morris Road
Shelby, OH
Joseph G Sberna
(419) 294-3930
885 N Sandusky Ave
Upper Sandusky, OH
Bradley D Campbell
(740) 387-2276
1073 Harding Memorial Pkwy
Marion, OH
Tyler K Huggins
(419) 468-0111
1200 State Route 598
Galion, OH
Omar Frederick Guimaraes, MD
419-342-2900
24 Morris Rd Ste 3
Shelby, OH
Anthony John Caeton
(740) 383-8498
1000 Mckinley Park Dr
Marion, OH
William King Stallworth, MD
704-545-3040
1069 Delaware Ave
Marion, OH
David William Foulk
(740) 387-2244
1140 Independence Ave
Marion, OH
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Probiotics and Pregnancy

Taking probiotics during pregnancy prevents obesity, according to a new study presented at  the 17th European Congress on Obesity in May. According to researchers, one year after giving birth, women were less likely to become obese if they had taken probiotics starting from the first trimester of pregnancy.

In recent years, nutritionists and health experts have labelled probiotics as superfoods. They maintain a healthy balance of bacteria in the digestive tract and fight the growth of harmful bacteria. They also help treat a range of intestinal diseases and play a role in controlling inflammation. Now, obesity researchers have started to investigate whether the balance of bacteria in the gut is a contributing factor to being overweight and whether adjusting the balance would help to fight these two conditions.  

"Central obesity, where overall obesity is combined with a particularly fat belly, is considered especially unhealthy," said Kirsi Laitinen, a nutritionist and senior lecturer at the University of Turku in Finland who presented the study. "We found it in 25 percent of the women who had received the probiotics along with dietary counselling, compared with 43 percent in the women who received diet advice alone."

In the study, 256 women were divided into three groups during the first trimester of pregnancy. Two of the groups received dietary counselling consistent with recommendations for healthy weight gain and optimal fetal development during pregnancy. They were also given food such as spreads and salad dressings with monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids, and fiber-enriched pasta and breakfast cereal to take home...

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