Publications by authors named "Savini Britto"

Background: The increasing incidence of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) around the world has coincided with a wide array of environmental and epidemiologic changes. The relationship between IBD incidence and household or family size decline, however, has not been examined before. Our background epidemiological analyses suggested an inverse association between household size and IBD incidence.

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Objectives: Disparities in health care for racial/ethnic minority children in the United States who are burdened by pediatric Crohn's disease (PCD) are not well understood.

Methods: A retrospective review of the Texas Children's Hospital ImproveCareNow database from 2007 to 2015 was performed. CD patients with a minimum of 2-year follow-up were included if the onset of symptoms attributable to inflammatory bowel disease was clearly documented.

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Article Synopsis
  • The experiment aimed to link variations in gut microbiome composition to the susceptibility of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and explore a potential preventive probiotic for newborns.
  • C57BL/BJ mice were subjected to acute colitis using dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) to serve as a model for IBD, while specific protective bacteria were tested through maternal probiotic supplementation during lactation.
  • Results showed that maternal supplementation with certain bacterial strains enhanced microbiome diversity and provided significant protection against colitis in young adult female mice, paving the way for future probiotic development targeting IBD in humans.
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The therapeutic effects of off-label oral vancomycin in pediatric and adult primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC)-inflammatory bowel disease, more commonly PSC-ulcerative colitis (UC), indicate the translational relevance of disease-associated microbiome findings. This is the first report on longitudinal salivary and fecal microbiome changes in a pediatric PSC-UC patient over the first 90 days of vancomycin therapy. Increase in bacterial diversity and abundance changes in , , and were observed.

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The specific carbohydrate diet (SCD) is an exclusion diet that has gained increasing public attention as a treatment option for inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs: Crohn's Disease (CD) and Ulcerative Colitis (UC)). Studies have demonstrated SCD leads to clinical and biochemical remission. Additional observations had controversial results when mucosal healing, or endoscopic remission was assessed in pediatric CD patients on partial SCD therapy, or SCD as adjunct treatment.

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Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD: Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) are becoming common around the world without a cure. Animal models of colitis have become instrumental in IBD research. The dextran sulfate sodium (DSS) induced murine colitis model is likely the most utilized due to its simplicity and reproducibility with over 4000 publications on PubMed, where weight loss is the most commonly used and reliable positive correlate.

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Background/purpose: Diagnostic delay or time to diagnosis, and its relationship with colectomy risk has been studied in adult Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), but rarely in pediatric IBD (PIBD), especially pediatric ulcerative colitis (P-UC), which often has a more severe course than adult UC. This study compared the relationship between diagnostic delay and colectomy in P-UC.

Methods: The medical records of P-UC patients, ages <18 years, diagnosed at Texas Children's Hospital from 2012 to 2018 were examined.

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The nutritional developmental origins of inflammatory bowel disease[s] (IBDs: Crohn's disease or Crohn disease [CD] and ulcerative colitis [UC]) and their diet-based treatments continue to receive increasing attention. There is growing evidence for the success of nutrition-based treatments, such as exclusive enteral nutrition [EEN] and the specific carbohydrate diet [SCD], in both paediatric and adult patients. Beyond these two dietary interventions, symptomatic benefit in IBD has also been shown from a gluten-free diet [GFD] and paleolithic diet [PALEO], among others.

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