Neurobehavioural Effects Induced by Caesarean Section

Our data link the gut microbiota to behavioural alterations in C-section mice and suggest the possibility of developing adjunctive microbiota-targeted therapies which may help to avert long-term negative consequences on behaviour associated with C-section

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Morais, Livia H., Golubeva, Anna V., Moloney, Gerard M., Moya-Pérez, Angela, Ventura-Silva, Ana Paula, Arboleya, Silvia, Bastiaanssen, Thomaz F.S., O'Sullivan, Orla, Rea, Kieran, Borre, Yuliya, Scott, Karen A., Patterson, Elaine, Cherry, Paul, Stilling, Roman, Hoban, Alan E., El Aidy, Sahar, Sequeira, Ana M., Beers, Sasja, Moloney, Rachel D., Renes, Ingrid B., Wang, Shugui, Knol, Jan, Ross, R.P., O'Toole, Paul W., Cotter, Paul D., Stanton, Catherine, Dinan, Timothy G., Cryan, John F.
Format: Dataset biblioteca
Published: University College Cork
Subjects:Caesarean Section, Mice, microbiota-targeted therapies,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/datasets/neurobehavioural-effects-induced-by-caesarean-section
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Summary:Our data link the gut microbiota to behavioural alterations in C-section mice and suggest the possibility of developing adjunctive microbiota-targeted therapies which may help to avert long-term negative consequences on behaviour associated with C-section