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microbiome

Woman's bare stomach

Gut bacteria tied to odds of getting Alzheimer’s

Bacteria

Gut microbiome fluctuates throughout the day and across seasons

Left to right: Professor Hiroki Ishikawa, Miho Tamai, and Masato Hirota from the Immune Signal Unit looked for associations between genes and proteins from blood immune cells and gut bacteria, and an individual’s immune response.

Gut bacteria could be behind weaker immune responses to COVID-19 vaccine

Nerve bundles

Can fecal transplant help early-stage ALS? Study aims to find out

Bacteria illustration

Antibiotic Resistance Driven by Geography, Demographics, Diet, and Lifestyle

Baby smiling

Your baby’s gut is crawling with unknown viruses

Control mice show the ability to clear away an experimental infection (images in the left column). But mice with impaired antimicrobial programs show increased intestine damage and inflammation (images in the right column), according to a study published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine.

Study to decode microbe-gut signaling suggests potential new treatment for IBD

Small baby in a person's hands

Vaginal microbiome does not influence babies’ gut microbiome

Researchers have identified gut bacteria that are associated with dementia with Lewy bodies.

Researchers identify three intestinal bacteria found in dementia with Lewy bodies

Wine connoisseurs face testing times as climate change alters flavours

The human Microbiome, genetic material of all the microbes that live on and inside the human body.

Multiple sclerosis discovery could end disease’s chronic inflammation

psyllium gel-like particles at 72h fermentation with the colonic Bifidobacteria (yellow) localised at the edge of the psyllium particles and Lactobacilli (orange) spread throughout the gel

Fiber discovery could shape better gut health

The human Microbiome, genetic material of all the microbes that live on and inside the human body.

Differences in gut microbiome linked to risk of death in COVID-19 patients

For years, investigators have sought to understand why people develop diabetes by studying the composition of the microbiome, which is a collection of microorganisms that include fungi, bacteria and viruses that live in the digestive tract. Photo by Getty.

Gut bacteria may play a role in diabetes

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