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Mashup Score: 26Farting Microbes: How Smelly Farts Can Help Protect Against Diseases - World Today News - 6 month(s) ago
Jakarta – Farts consist of odorless gas and odorous gas. The odorless ones consist of nitrogen, oxygen, hydrogen and carbon dioxide. Meanwhile, fart gas that smells like rotten eggs comes from hydrogen sulfide in small portions. This smelly fart gas is produced by gut microbes that eat taurine. Even though they produce foul hydrogen sulfide […]
Source: www.world-today-news.comCategories: General Medicine News, General NewsTweet
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Mashup Score: 14What's that smell? New gut microbe produces smelly toxic gas but protects against pathogens - 6 month(s) ago
An international team of scientists led by microbiologist Alexander Loy from the University of Vienna has discovered a new intestinal microbe that feeds exclusively on taurine and produces the fou …
Source: www.bionity.comCategories: General Medicine News, General NewsTweet
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Mashup Score: 20
Taurine-degrading bacteria influence intestinal microbiome
Source: medienportal.univie.ac.atCategories: General Medicine News, General NewsTweet
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Mashup Score: 1Serotonin reduction in post-acute sequelae of viral infection - 7 month(s) ago
Post-viral syndromes are associated with serotonin reduction, which may contribute to the neurological and cognitive symptoms seen in individuals with Long COVID.
Source: www.cell.comCategories: Hem/Oncs, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Sputum microbiome differs in refractory, cured nontuberculosis mycobacterial lung disease - 7 month(s) ago
HONOLULU — A patient’s sputum microbiome may serve as a biomarker for the outcome of antibiotic treatment for nontuberculosis mycobacterial pulmonary disease, according to research presented at the CHEST Annual Meeting.Microbial diversity at baseline appeared higher among those who reached a microbiologic cure vs. those resistant to treatment, and both sets of patients had different
Source: www.healio.comCategories: Latest Headlines, PulmonologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Food for Thought 2023 online: Rising to the challenge of obesity and diabetes | Microsoft Teams - 7 month(s) ago
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Source: teams.microsoft.comCategories: General Medicine Journals and Societies, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 0
Patients with axial spondyloarthritis and other related inflammatory diseases demonstrate common microbiome dysfunction characteristics, according to data published in Arthritis & Rheumatology.
Source: www.healio.comCategories: Latest Headlines, RheumatologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 0Mediterranean diet increases potentially beneficial bacterial species in firefighters - 7 month(s) ago
HONOLULU — World Trade Center firefighters with lung disease showed increases in Bacteroides ovatus after 6 months on a low-calorie Mediterranean diet, according to a presentation at the CHEST Annual Meeting.This specific bacterial species may have a positive impact on metabolic and lung health by decreasing inflammation, according to researchers.
Source: www.healio.comCategories: Latest Headlines, PulmonologyTweet
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Mashup Score: 12Appropriateness of outpatient antibiotic prescribing among privately insured US patients: ICD-10-CM based cross sectional study - 7 month(s) ago
To assess the appropriateness of outpatient antibiotic prescribing for privately insured children and non-elderly adults in the US using a comprehensive classification scheme of diagnosis codes in ICD-10-CM (international classification of diseases-clinical …
Source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.govCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
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Mashup Score: 4An early-life microbiota metabolite protects against obesity by regulating intestinal lipid metabolism - 7 month(s) ago
Shelton et al. determine that early-life antibiotics exacerbate diet-induced obesity by disrupting interactions between the gut microbiota and the small intestine epithelium. Their study identifies that a Lactobacillus-derived metabolite, phenyllactic acid, regulates intestinal PPAR-γ to limit fat accumulation, revealing a mechanism by which the early-life microbiota protects against metabolic dysfunction.
Source: www.cell.comCategories: Healthcare Professionals, Latest HeadlinesTweet
Farting Microbes: How Smelly Farts Can Help Protect Against Diseases @LoyTeam @HuiminYe4 @DOME_Vienna @univienna #microbiome https://t.co/vCWu4st0QS