Ping Zhou
Southern Medical University
7 Papers
Ping Zhou is an academic researcher from Southern Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Low birth weight & Necrotizing enterocolitis. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 7 publications.
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Papers
Time to Full Enteral Feeding for Very Low-Birth-Weight Infants Varies Markedly Among Hospitals Worldwide But May Not Be Associated With Incidence of Necrotizing Enterocolitis: The NEOMUNE-NeoNutriNet Cohort Study.
Marita de Waard,Yanqi Li,Yanna Zhu,Adejumoke I. Ayede,Janet E. Berrington,Frank H. Bloomfield,Olubunmi O. Busari,Barbara E. Cormack,Nicholas D. Embleton,Johannes B. van Goudoever,Gorm Greisen,Zhongqian He,Yan Huang,Xiaodong Li,Hung-Chih Lin,Jiaping Mei,Paula P. Meier,Chuan Nie,Aloka L. Patel,Christian Ritz,Per T. Sangild,Per T. Sangild,Tom Skeath,Karen Simmer,Olukemi O. Tongo,Signe S. Uhlenfeldt,Sufen Ye,Xuqiang Ye,Chunyi Zhang,Chunyi Zhang,Ping Zhou +30 more
TL;DR: Use of formula and long TFF in South China was associated with more use of antibiotics and slower weight gain, but apparently not with more NEC or higher mortality.
Pasteurization Procedures for Donor Human Milk Affect Body Growth, Intestinal Structure, and Resistance against Bacterial Infections in Preterm Pigs
Yanqi Li,Duc Ninh Nguyen,Marita de Waard,L. O. D. Christensen,Ping Zhou,Pingping Jiang,Jing Sun,Anders Miki Bojesen,Charlotte Lauridsen,Jens Lykkesfeldt,Trine Kastrup Dalsgaard,Stine B. Bering,Per T. Sangild,Per T. Sangild +13 more
TL;DR: UVC-treated DM improves gut maturation and resistance toward bacterial infections relative to HP-treatedDM, and may induce better weight gain, intestinal health, and resistance against bacterial infections as shown in preterm pigs as a model for DM-fed preterm infants.
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Bovine Colostrum for Preterm Infants in the First Days of Life: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial.
Sandra Meinich Juhl,Xuqiang Ye,Ping Zhou,Yanqi Li,Elisabeth Omolabake Iyore,Lixia Zhang,Pingping Jiang,Johannes B. van Goudoever,Johannes B. van Goudoever,Gorm Greisen,Per T. Sangild +10 more
TL;DR: The results indicate that it is feasible to use BC as a supplement to MM during the first weeks of life to increase enteral protein intake in preterm infants, and plasma tyrosine levels may be a good marker for excessive protein intake.
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The Role of Immunonutrients in the Prevention of Necrotizing Enterocolitis in Preterm Very Low Birth Weight Infants
TL;DR: Based on current research evidence, probiotics are the most documented effective method to prevent NEC, while others still require further investigation in animal studies and clinical randomized controlled trials.
Early Use of Antibiotics Is Associated with a Lower Incidence of Necrotizing Enterocolitis in Preterm, Very Low Birth Weight Infants: The NEOMUNE-NeoNutriNet Cohort Study
Yanqi Li,René Liang Shen,Adejumoke I. Ayede,Janet E. Berrington,Frank H. Bloomfield,Olubunmi O. Busari,Barbara E. Cormack,Nicholas D. Embleton,Johannes B. van Goudoever,Gorm Greisen,Zhongqian He,Yan Huang,Xiaodong Li,Hung-Chih Lin,Jiaping Mei,Paula P. Meier,Chuan Nie,Aloka L. Patel,Per T. Sangild,Tom Skeath,Karen Simmer,Signe S. Uhlenfeldt,Marita de Waard,Sufen Ye,Xuqiang Ye,Chunyi Zhang,Chunyi Zhang,Yanna Zhu,Ping Zhou +28 more
TL;DR: In this large international cohort of preterm VLBW infants, a minor proportion of infants did not receive antibiotics just after birth, yet these infants had a higher incidence of NEC, which is important to better understand the role of variables such as time, type, and length of antibiotic treatment on NEC incidence, immune development, gut colonization, and antibiotic resistance in the NICU.