Abstract
The faecal microflora of breast-fed infants, weaned children and adults has been examined in rural Nigeria and urban U.K. Breast-fed infants had a similar anaerobic flora dominated by bifidobacteria but bacteroides were isolated in less than a quarter of either community. Weaned children in both communities had greater numbers of bacteroides and clostridia than breast-fed infants. Even higher numbers of bacteroides and clostridia were present in U.K. adults but not in Nigerian adults. Numbers of bacteroides and clostridia were greater in a group of Nigerian infants drinking cow's milk than those receiving breast milk alone and lower in a group of weaned children with diarrhoea compared with uninfected subjects. © 1981, Cambridge University Press. All rights reserved.
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CITATION STYLE
Tomkins, A. M., Bradley, A. K., Oswald, S., & Drasar, B. S. (1981). Diet and the faecal microflora of infants, children and adults in rural Nigeria and urban U.K. Journal of Hygiene, 86(3), 285–293. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022172400069035
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