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The gut microbiome

Current Biology, 2022
All animals, from cnidarians to humans, are colonized with microbes, and the greatest diversity and magnitude of these host-associated microorganisms resides within the intestine. Referred to as the gut microbiome, membership can be as simple as one species of bacteria or can be composed of hundreds to thousands of different microbes across the domains
Gavin A, Kuziel, Seth, Rakoff-Nahoum
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The gut microbiome and hypertension

Nature Reviews Nephrology, 2023
A large body of evidence has emerged in the past decade supporting a role for the gut microbiome in the regulation of blood pressure. The field has moved from association to causation in the last 5 years, with studies that have used germ-free animals, antibiotic treatments and direct supplementation with microbial metabolites.
J. O’Donnell   +3 more
semanticscholar   +3 more sources

The gut microbiome in epilepsy

Microbial Pathogenesis, 2020
The close relationship between epilepsy and autoimmune diseases and the fact that the cause of epilepsy is idiopathic in 60% of cases suggest that intestinal microbiota may play a role in the etiology of epilepsy. In this study, we analyzed and compared the intestinal microbiota composition of patients with idiopathic focal epilepsy (n = 30) and ...
Bengü Altunan   +3 more
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The Gut Microbiome

Inflammation & Allergy-Drug Targets, 2014
Since the discovery and use of the microscope in the 17(th) century, we know that we host trillions of micro-organisms mostly in the form of bacteria indwelling the "barrier organs" skin, gut, and airways. They exert regulatory functions, are in a continuous dialogue with the intestinal epithelia, influence energy handling, produce nutrients, and may ...
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