Giving your children probiotics may have some potential in treating diarrhea and preventing antibiotic-associated diarrhea, but more research is needed to determine how effective these supplements may be, according to a new clinical report from the American Academy of Pediatrics. Overall, the authors of the report suggest that probiotics can offer benefits to healthy children and infants, but they should not be given to children with chronic or serious illness, or those who have compromised immune systems.
Probiotics are supplements or enhanced foods that contain living microorganisms, such as yogurt. The idea is to boost the kind of helpful bacteria in the body that can destroy harmful bacteria and reduce infection.
Prebiotics are foods that cannot be normally digested by the gut, and which only promotes probiotic bacterial growth, such as the compounds like oligosaccharides that are found in breast milk and are added to some infant formulas.
A new clinical report outlines the benefits and risks of children taking probiotics and prebiotics as follows:
Probiotics are supplements or enhanced foods that contain living microorganisms, such as yogurt. The idea is to boost the kind of helpful bacteria in the body that can destroy harmful bacteria and reduce infection.
Prebiotics are foods that cannot be normally digested by the gut, and which only promotes probiotic bacterial growth, such as the compounds like oligosaccharides that are found in breast milk and are added to some infant formulas.
A new clinical report outlines the benefits and risks of children taking probiotics and prebiotics as follows:
- Infants and children who ate probiotic foods -- mainly yogurt -- early on while having diarrhea from acute viral gastroenteritis experienced a shorter duration of diarrhea by about one day.
- Other studies showed that probiotics were modestly effective in preventing antibiotic-associated diarrhea in healthy children when compared with a placebo. However, there is no evidence that probiotics treat antibiotic-associated diarrhea.
- There is some preliminary evidence to suggest probiotics may help prevent necrotizing enterocolitis or death of intestinal tissue in infants born weighing more than 1,000 grams.
- There is no conclusive evidence to suggest probiotics treat intestinal conditions, such as Crohn’s disease, irritable bowel syndrome, or constipation, as well as colic, and allergies in children.
- Infant formulas enhanced with probiotics or prebiotics do not appear to cause harm in healthy infants, but there’s insufficient evidence to suggest they offer any clinical benefits.
- Prebiotics may help reduce atopic eczema in healthy children, although more research is needed before prebiotics in infant formula would be recommended to help reduce infections.
- It’s unclear if probiotics or prebiotics offer any long-term protection against allergies.