Necrotizing enterocolitis is an acute inflammatory necrosis of bowel that primarily afflicts premature infants in the neonatal intensive care unit setting. Although patients who develop this disease have high morbidity and mortality rates, the pathogenesis is poorly understood, and therefore there are no specific preventive or treatment strategies that have been clearly effective. Recent studies have suggested that the pathophysiology of necrotizing enterocolitis includes alterations in the inflammatory response leading to dysregulated pro-inflammatory signaling in premature infants, as well as abnormal intestinal bacterial colonization patterns that can activate these inflammatory pathways, and these factors are discussed in depth in the following chapters. While human milk feedings are currently the standard of care for the prevention of this challenging condition, new approaches will be described based on sound evidence that might have a significant impact for premature infants throughout the world.
Acknowledgment Epidemiology and Clinical Considerations Intestinal Physiology and Host Defense The Role of Gut Flora and Commensal Microorganisms in Neonatal NEC The Role of Inflammation in Neonatal NEC The Role of Impaired Intestinal Circulation and prbc Transfusions in NEC The Impact of Feeding and Breast Milk on NEC The Effects of Growth Factors on NEC Summary and Unifying Hypothesis References Author Biography
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