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Deshanie Rai

Researcher at DSM

Publications -  15
Citations -  510

Deshanie Rai is an academic researcher from DSM. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bioavailability & Pharmacokinetics. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 444 citations.

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Amino Acid Profiles in Term and Preterm Human Milk through Lactation: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: A systematic review of total amino acid (TAA) and free amino Acid (FAA) profiles, in term and preterm HM derived from 13 and 19 countries, shows some significant differences were observed, based on gestational age and region.
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Longitudinal Changes in Lactoferrin Concentrations in Human Milk: A Global Systematic Review,

TL;DR: Lactoferrin concentration was highest during early lactation and rapidly declined to remain relatively unchanged from 1 month to 2 years of lactation, and factors that may influence these concentrations are briefly described.
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Molecular ecological analysis of fecal bacterial populations from term infants fed formula supplemented with selected blends of prebiotics.

TL;DR: New data indicate that formulas containing PDX, GOS, and LOS blends are more likely to influence gut microbes when administration is begun in early infancy and justify further investigation of the age-related effects of these blends on fecal microbiota.
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Noninvasive stool-based detection of infant gastrointestinal development using gene expression profiles from exfoliated epithelial cells

TL;DR: The results support the premise that mRNA isolated from stool has value in terms of characterizing the epigenetic mechanisms underlying the developmentally regulated transcriptional activation/repression of genes known to modulate gastrointestinal function.
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Addition of polydextrose and galactooligosaccharide to formula does not affect bacterial translocation in the neonatal piglet.

TL;DR: PDX and GOS added to formula do not induce BT in healthy piglets, and low levels of bacteria in MLN of healthy neonatal piglets may reflect mucosal sampling rather than pathological BT.