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Missing Nutrient Might Explain Health Problems Among Babies Born To Women With HIV

  • A missing nutrient in breast milk may explain health problems among children of mothers with HIV.
  • Breast milk from women with HIV has tryptophan levels about 50% lower than that of women not infected.
  • Tryptophan is essential for immune function, growth, and brain development.
  • The study suggests that tryptophan deficiency may explain immune, growth, and cognitive differences in these children.
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InsideNoVA.comInsideNoVA.com
+21 Reposted by 21 other sources
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Missing Nutrient Might Explain Health Problems Among Babies Born To Women With HIV

Key Takeaways

Mothers with HIV often have children with compromised immune systems. We now know why: breast milk is missing a crucial amino acid. Scientists have long been puzzled by this: mothers with HIV often have children with compromised immune systems, even if the child itself doesn't have HIV. But why? That was […] Want to know more about science? Read the latest articles on Scientias.nl .

·Middelharnis, Netherlands
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BIOENGINEER.ORG broke the news in on Tuesday, October 28, 2025.
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