The biological modifications of milk are linked to mental health of mothers of infants affected by bronchiolitis
L. Piccirilli, I. Alberti, A. Pistocchi, V. Bollati, G. P. Milani, M. Buoli

TL;DR
This study shows that maternal mental health affects the levels of cell-derived particles in breast milk, which may influence infant health.
Contribution
It is the first to link maternal mental health with extracellular vesicle concentrations in breast milk from infants with bronchiolitis.
Findings
Higher maternal resilience is linked to lower neutrophilic and endothelial EVs in breast milk.
Increased anxiety scores correlate with higher levels of B-lymphocyte and multiple inflammatory cell-derived EVs.
Stress and anxiety are associated with elevated concentrations of inflammatory EVs in breast milk.
Abstract
Breast milk is a dynamic type of nourishment that changes based on the needs of the child. An increasing amount of data suggests that mental health may be an important factor in such modulation. In addition, breast milk contains extracellular vesicles (EVs), which are currently considered an important dynamic system of communication between cells, even of different individuals. Purpose of this article is to investigate whether changes in breast milk in terms of EVs concentrations are related to maternal mental health. This is a case-control study for which we enrolled mothers of infants with bronchiolitis (N=33) and mothers of healthy infants (N=13). Breast milk samples were taken and EVs concentrations were quantified. Maternal mental health was assessed by administration of five different psychometric scales: Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS), State Trait Anxiety Inventory…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBreastfeeding Practices and Influences · Pediatric health and respiratory diseases
