The Vaginal Microbiome and Viable Pregnancies

By Rodney Dietert, PhD

Introduction

Hi Everyone. Welcome to the Microbiome Minute with your host…..me, Rodney Dietert, Professor Emeritus, Cornell University, and author of The Human Superorganism.  For about a minute of your time each week, I will share the latest microbiome research and most importantly, why it matters for your better health. Learn a little micro lingo, impress your friends, and most importantly, better connect with your body’s microbial partners.  They have been patiently waiting for your undivided attention

The Story

‘Cooperation between the vaginal microbiome and local immune cells is vitally important in successful pregnancies.  Karen Grewal led a research team from London (Imperial College), Bristol, and Warwick in a study comparing both the vaginal microbiome and the local immune environment among chromosomally-normal, viable term vs. miscarriage pregnancies as well as vs. chromosomally-abnormal miscarriages. Friendly lactobacilli bacteria are predominant in a healthy vagina. When these are depleted, the pH increases, pathogens can take over, and problems usually occur (e.g., bacterial vaginosis). 

These researchers found that chromosomally-normal spontaneous miscarriages were associated with depleted lactobaccili, increased bacterial pathogens, and increased vaginal inflammation (based on specific cytokine levels) compared with viable pregnancies. Chromosomally-abnormal miscarriages seemed to involve a different process.

What you need to know

The take-home message is: monitoring/management of the vaginal microbiome (e.g., lactobaccilli predominance) throughout the pregnancy is critical to

1) keep pathogens minimized,

2) avoid problematic inflammation at the maternal-fetal interface and

3) minimize the risk of miscarriage. 

For the full story click here.

The Microbiome First Initiative

Why Microbiome First?

The microbiome and its genes have been shown to have great control over human health. By addressing the microbiome first, before manipulating health with drugs  and medications, researchers suspect that quality human healthcare can be achieved more effectively, at a much lower cost.

The Microbiome First initiative aims to elevate awareness of the extent to which the human microbiome along with its majority of human genes affects all aspects of human development, health, disease and wellbeing.

Including the microbiome in medicine, public health, prevention, nutrition, wellness, and therapeutics is essential if we are to open a path toward sustainable healthcare.

In some cases, the human microbiome may play an adjunct role in prevention and therapy while in many cases [e.g., colonization resistance against infections, prevention of noncommunicable diseases and conditions (NCDs)], it should be the first consideration.

– Rodney Deitert