Gut microbiota is implicated in the right functioning of many organs, such as lungs, kidneys, liver, heart and brain. However, any disruption to the microbiota homeostasis results in the ...
The following is a summary of “Mechanistic implications of the Mediterranean diet in patients with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease- multi-omic results from a prospective cohort,” published in the ...
Dysbiosis, or microbial imbalance, is increasingly implicated in the onset and progression of diseases like PDAC, underscoring the need to explore gut microbiota's role in cancer and other ...
Antibiotic use—especially often or for extended periods—is the most common cause of gut dysbiosis. Antibiotics treat bacterial infections by killing or reducing harmful bacteria, but they also ...
However, chronic substance use can disrupt the gut microbial ecosystem, resulting in microbial dysbiosis, altered intestinal permeability, and impaired host immune function and host metabolic health.