Samuli Rautava
samrau@utu.fi |
Neonatology; Nutrition; Mucosal Immunology; Intestinal Microbiota; Probiotics
Samuli Rautava graduated from medical school in 1999 and has specialized in pediatics (2011) and neonatology (2013) at the University of Turku. He has completed a 2-year postdoctoral research fellowship at the Mucosal Immunology Laboratory at Harvard University & Massachusetts General Hospital and a 1-year clinical neonatology fellowship at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. He was appojnted docent/adjunct professor in experimental pediatrics in 2013. He currently works as clinical instructor in pediatrics at the University of Turku and as part-time (30%) neonatologist at the Turku University Hospital.
Dr. Rautava’s research is based on the
general hypothesis that early contact with microbes and particularly the
indigenous intestinal microbiota has a significant long-term impact on health
by modulating the risk of preterm delivery and the complications of prematurity
as well as the risk of chronic immunoinflammatory disease. The translational
research project consists of birth cohort register studies, utilization of
machine learning on big data, nested case-control studies as well as
experimental models and randomized clinical trials to establish causality.
Author of 56 scientific articles: 29
Original publications, 16 Review articles, 6 Chapters in books, 7 Scientific
publications in Finnis, 21 Congress abstracts and 17 Invited Lectures in
International Academic Meetings
H Index 23.
Academic Honours: The
Niilo Hallman price from the Foundation for Paediatric Research, Finland.
Clinical instructor of pediatrics at the
University of Turku since 2013. Steering group member of the Doctoral Programme in
Clinical Research at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Turku.
- HPV infection and bacterial microbiota in the placenta, uterine cervix and oral mucosa (2018)
- Scientific Reports
- Increase in serum Interleukin-10 does not alleviate pro-inflammatory MCP-1 production in obese pregnancies (2018)
- Cytokine
- (2018)
- Frontiers in Pediatrics
- Maternal gut and breast milk microbiota affect infant gut antibiotic resistome and mobile genetic elements (2018)
- Nature Communications
- Maternal Intrapartum Antibiotic Administration and Infantile Colic: Is there a Connection? (2018)
- Neonatology
- Milloin probiootteja lapselle? (2018)
- Sic! : lääketietoa Fimeasta
- Probiotic Intervention Through the Pregnant and Breastfeeding Mother to Reduce Disease Risk in the Child (2018)
- Breastfeeding Medicine
- Probiotics on Pediatric Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders (2018)
- Nutrients
- (2018)
- DuodecimLääkärilehti
- A cross-sectional comparative study of gut bacterial community of Indian and Finnish children (2017)
- Scientific Reports
- Epigenetic Matters: The Link between Early Nutrition, Microbiome, And Long-term Health Development (2017)
- Frontiers in Pediatrics
- (2017)
- Beneficial MicrobesLääkärilehti
- Keskosen ravitsemus (2017) Keskosen hoito ja kehitys Tuulia Arkkola, Samuli Rautava
- Kuka hyötyy probiooteista? (2017)
- Late preterm birth has direct and indirect effects on infant gut microbiota development during the first six months of life (2017)
- Acta Paediatrica
- Microbial Composition of the Initial Colonization of Newborns (2017) Intestinal Microbiome: Functional Aspects in Health and Disease. 88th Nestlé Nutrition Institute Workshop, Playa del Carmen, September 2016 Rautava Samuli
- Probioottien tehosta ja haitoista tarvitaan lisää tietoa (2017)
- Probiotics modulate gut microbiota and health status in Japanese cedar pollinosis patients during the pollen season (2017)
- European Journal of Nutrition
- The Impact of Storage Conditions on the Stability of Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG and Bifidobacterium animalis subsp. lactis Bb12 in Human Milk (2017)
- Breastfeeding Medicine
- Antibiotics, obesity and the link to microbes - what are we doing to our children? (2016)
- BMC Medicine



