Search results for "Lacteal"

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Human neonates prefer colostrum to mature milk: Evidence for an olfactory bias toward the "initial milk"?

2021

International audience; OBJECTIVES: Colostrum is the initial milk secretion which ingestion by neonates warrants their adaptive start in life. Colostrum is accordingly expected to be attractive to newborns. The present study aims to assess whether colostrum is olfactorily attractive for 2-day-old newborns when presented against mature milk or a control. METHODS: The head-orientation of waking newborns was videotaped in three experiments pairing the odors of: (a) colostrum (sampled on postpartum day 2, not from own mother) and mature milk (sampled on average on postpartum day 32, not from own mother) (n tested newborns = 15); (b) Colostrum and control (water; n = 9); and (c) Mature milk and …

LactealOffspringPhysiology030209 endocrinology & metabolismContext (language use)Biology03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinefluids and secretionsLactationGeneticsmedicineIngestionHumans0601 history and archaeologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsMature milkreproductive and urinary physiology060101 anthropology[SDV.NEU.PC]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neurons and Cognition [q-bio.NC]/Psychology and behaviorMilk HumanColostrumInfant Newbornfood and beverages06 humanities and the artsOlfactory Perceptionmedicine.anatomical_structureBreast FeedingOdorAnthropologyColostrumAnatomyAmerican journal of human biology : the official journal of the Human Biology CouncilREFERENCES
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The Human Mammary Odour Factor: Variability and Regularities in Sources and Functions

2019

In the course of evolution, human mothers have been, and still are, under strong selective pressure to induce their newborns’ colostrum ingestion promptly after birth. As a concentrate of nutrients, passive immunity, antioxidants, growth factors and symbiotic microbiota, colostrum functions as the evolved antidote to ubiquitous pathogens and threats of neonatal exhaustion. Under such constraints, any means to speed up colostrum/milk intake can only have been beneficial to neonatal viability and adaptive life onset along evolutionary time. The areolar-nipple areas of human lactating females emit lacteal substrates conveying chemostimuli that are attractive and release mouthing and sucking in…

medicine.anatomical_structureAdaptive valueLactealmedicine.medical_treatmentmedicinePhysiologyIngestionColostrumPassive immunityBiologyMouthingAreolar glandsAreola
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