Publications by authors named "Juliette Madan"

Article Synopsis
  • - The article discusses how individuals with food allergies have limited "food freedom," leading to various challenges including cognitive, emotional, social, nutritional, and financial impacts.
  • - It suggests that avoiding certain foods can affect gut health and potentially contribute to neuroinflammatory issues, impacting mental health.
  • - The use of psychological counseling is highlighted as a helpful approach, while also noting that strict dietary restrictions might hinder overall dietary health benefits.
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Objectives: The gut microbiota plays an important role in childhood growth. Our longitudinal cohort includes children with cystic fibrosis (CwCF) treated with highly effective modulator therapy. We aimed to elucidate early premodulator microbial signatures associated with postmodulator weight for CwCF later in childhood.

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This study examined the association between prenatal cannabis exposure and autism spectrum disorder (ASD) diagnoses and traits. A total sample of 11,570 children (ages 1-18; 53% male; 25% Hispanic; 60% White) from 34 cohorts of the National Institutes of Health-funded environmental influences on child health outcomes consortium were included in analyses. Results from generalized linear mixed models replicated previous studies showing that associations between prenatal cannabis exposure and ASD traits in children are not significant when controlling for relevant covariates, particularly tobacco exposure.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Neuropsychiatric symptoms are frequently seen in individuals with allergic diseases, with factors like neuroinflammation and social implications potentially explaining this connection.
  • - The review explores how mental health relates to various allergic conditions, including allergic rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, asthma, and food allergies, but highlights that more research is needed, especially regarding how medications affect these interconnections.
  • - Clinicians are encouraged to proactively screen for mental health issues using tools like the Patient Health Questionnaire, as these can help identify patients needing psychiatric support, though they should be cautious of the limitations of these screening tools.
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Background: Identifying modifiable risk factors of autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) may inform interventions to reduce financial burden. The infant/toddler gut microbiome is one such feature that has been associated with social behaviors, but results vary between cohorts. We aimed to identify consistent overall and sex-specific associations between the early-life gut microbiome and autism-related behaviors.

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Background: Triclosan is an endocrine-disrupting chemical, but associations with pubertal outcomes remain unclear. We examined associations of gestational and childhood triclosan with adolescent hormone concentrations and pubertal stage.

Methods: We quantified urinary triclosan concentrations twice during pregnancy and seven times between birth and 12 years in participants recruited from Cincinnati, OH (2003-2006).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the link between gut metabolites found in infants' stool and their social behavior as toddlers, particularly relating to autism.
  • Stool samples from infants at six weeks and one year old were analyzed, but initially results showed no significant connections between individual metabolites and social responsiveness scores in 3-year-olds.
  • However, a specific pattern of metabolites in 1-year-olds, characterized by high lactate and low short-chain fatty acids, was associated with fewer autism-related behaviors, suggesting a potential influence of gut bacteria on neurodevelopment.
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Allergist-immunologists face significant challenges as experts in an ever-evolving field of neuroimmunology. Among these challenges is the increasingly frequent need to counsel patients with suspected mast cell activation disorders about perceived comorbidities, which may include hypermobile Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, amplified pain syndrome, fibromyalgia, burning sensation syndromes, migraines, irritable bowel syndrome, and postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome. Patients may experience comorbid anxiety, panic disorder, and depression associated with disturbed sleep, fatigue, and cognitive impairment that often worsen when their physical symptoms increase in severity.

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Persons with cystic fibrosis (CF), starting in early life, show intestinal microbiome dysbiosis characterized in part by a decreased relative abundance of the genus is a major producer of the intestinal short chain fatty acid propionate. We demonstrate here that cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator-defective (CFTR-/-) Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells are responsive to the anti-inflammatory effects of propionate. Furthermore, isolates inhibit the IL-1β-induced inflammatory response of CFTR-/- Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells and do so in a propionate-dependent manner.

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The gut physiology of pediatric and adult persons with cystic fibrosis (pwCF) is altered relative to healthy persons. The CF gut is characterized, in part, as having excess mucus, increased fat content, acidic pH, increased inflammation, increased antibiotic perturbation, and the potential for increased oxygen availability. These physiological differences shift nutritional availability and the local environment for intestinal microbes, thus likely driving significant changes in microbial metabolism, colonization, and competition with other microbes.

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Background: In the United States, disparities in gestational age at birth by maternal race, ethnicity, and geography are theorized to be related, in part, to differences in individual- and neighborhood-level socioeconomic status (SES). Yet, few studies have examined their combined effects or whether associations vary by maternal race and ethnicity and United States Census region.

Methods: We assembled data from 34 cohorts in the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO) program representing 10,304 participants who delivered a liveborn, singleton infant from 2000 through 2019.

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There are challenges in merging microbiome data from diverse research groups due to the intricate and multifaceted nature of such data. To address this, we utilized a combination of machine-learning (ML) models to analyze 16S sequencing data from a substantial set of gut microbiome samples, sourced from 12 distinct infant cohorts that were gathered prospectively. Our initial focus was on the mode of delivery due to its prior association with changes in infant gut microbiomes.

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Arsenic is related to neurodevelopmental outcomes and is associated with the composition of the gut microbiome. Data on the modifying role of the microbiome are limited. We probed suggestive relationships between arsenic and social behaviors to quantify the modifying role of the infant gut microbiome.

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Objective: Pediatric Autoimmune Neuropsychiatric Disorder Associated with Streptococcal infection (PANDAS) and Pediatric Acute-Onset Neuropsychiatric syndrome (PANS) are presumed autoimmune complications of infection or other instigating events. To determine the incidence of these disorders, we performed a retrospective review for the years 2017-2019 at three academic medical centers.

Methods: We identified the population of children receiving well-child care at each institution.

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Prenatal exposure to metals/metalloids, even at common US population levels, may pose risks to fetal health, and affect children's lung function. Yet, the combined effects of simultaneous prenatal exposures on children's lung function remain largely unexplored. This study analyzed 11 metals (As speciation, Cd, Co, Cu, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, Sn, Zn) in maternal urine during weeks 24-28 of gestation and evaluated lung function, including forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in the first second of expiration (FEV), in 316 US mother-child pairs at around age 7.

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The gut physiology of pediatric and adult persons with cystic fibrosis (pwCF) is altered relative to healthy persons. The CF gut is characterized, in part, as having excess mucus, increased fat content, acidic pH, increased inflammation, increased antibiotic perturbation and the potential for increased oxygen availability. These physiological differences shift nutritional availability and the local environment for intestinal microbes, thus likely driving significant changes in microbial metabolism, colonization and competition with other microbes.

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Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a heritable disease that causes altered physiology at mucosal sites; these changes result in chronic infections in the lung, significant gastrointestinal complications as well as dysbiosis of the gut microbiome, although the latter has been less well explored. Here, we describe the longitudinal development of the gut microbiome in a cohort of children with CF (cwCF) from birth through early childhood (0-4 years of age) using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing of stool samples as a surrogate for the gut microbiota. Similar to healthy populations, alpha diversity of the gut microbiome increases significantly with age, but diversity plateaus at ~2 years of age for this CF cohort.

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The healthy human infant gut microbiome undergoes stereotypical changes in taxonomic composition between birth and maturation to an adult-like stable state. During this time, extensive communication between microbiota and the host immune system contributes to health status later in life. Although there are many reported associations between microbiota compositional alterations and disease in adults, less is known about how microbiome development is altered in pediatric diseases.

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Objectives: To predict behavioral disruptions in middle childhood, we identified latent classes of prenatal substance use.

Study Design: As part of the Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes Program, we harmonized prenatal substance use data and child behavior outcomes from 2195 women and their 6- to 11-year-old children across 10 cohorts in the US and used latent class-adjusted regression models to predict parent-rated child behavior.

Results: Three latent classes fit the data: low use (90.

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Article Synopsis
  • Human infant gut microbiomes are significantly influenced by the consumption of human milk, which contains various microbes and prebiotics essential for immune development and overall health.
  • In a study with 189 maternal-infant pairs, samples of breast milk and infant stools were collected at multiple time points to analyze microbial DNA and identify distinct microbial profiles.
  • The results showed strong correlations between specific types of breast milk microbiomes and infant gut microbiomes, particularly for infants delivered via Cesarean section, indicating that maternal milk composition can affect the gut health of infants over time.
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Article Synopsis
  • The ECHO-Wide Cohort Study (EWC) is a big research project started in 2016 to help improve children's health in the U.S. by looking at different factors that affect their well-being.
  • It collects lots of data from 69 groups and has information on over 60,000 kids, with some kids also giving new info and samples for research.
  • Researchers study five main health areas, like how kids develop and their weight, while considering things like air pollution and family health.
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Unlabelled: Human milk is rich in essential nutrients and immune-activating compounds but is also a source of toxicants including per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Evidence suggests that immune-related effects of PFAS may, in part, be due to alterations of the microbiome. We aimed to identify the association between milk PFAS exposure and the infant gut microbiome.

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In utero and early life exposure to inorganic arsenic (iAs) alters immune response in experimental animals and is associated with an increased risk of infant infections. iAs exposure is related to differences in the gut microbiota diversity, community structure, and the relative abundance of individual microbial taxa both in laboratory and human studies. Metabolomics permits a direct measure of molecular products of microbial and host metabolic processes.

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During infancy, the interplay between the developing immune system and the microbiome is critical. We examined whether blood immune cell composition at birth in the umbilical cord (inferred by DNA methylation profiling) related to the early infant gut microbiome (assessed by 16S rRNA gene sequencing) among 73 infants in the New Hampshire Birth Cohort Study. We used generalized estimating equations and controlled for false discovery rate to select microbial taxa associated with immune cells.

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Background: Restrictive measures were widely introduced at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic to reduce the spread of the virus. These restrictions have been linked to reductions in laboratory-diagnosed infections and hospitalisations. It is unclear if the observed decreases reflect a reduction in health-seeking behaviour or results from fewer infections per se.

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