Research Topic: fungal dysbiosis

The Gut Mycobiome for Precision Medicine

This comprehensive review explores how fungi in our gut play important roles in our health and disease. While fungi make up only a tiny fraction of our gut microbiota, they have outsized effects on conditions like diabetes, inflammatory bowel disease, and even certain cancers. The review discusses how scientists study these fungi and how understanding individual fungal profiles could lead to personalized medical treatments tailored to each person’s unique microbial makeup.

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Mycobiome analyses of critically ill COVID-19 patients

This study examined fungal infections in severely ill COVID-19 patients treated in intensive care units across Europe. Researchers found that a dangerous mold called Aspergillus fumigatus was more common in patients who died and less common in those treated with azole antifungal drugs. The findings suggest that giving antifungal medications to critically ill COVID-19 patients when they arrive at the hospital might help prevent fungal-related deaths.

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Characterization of the gut mycobiome in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and correlations with serum metabolome

This research reveals that the types of fungi living in our gut are linked to fatty liver disease in ways we didn’t fully understand before. While researchers have long studied bacteria in our gut, they largely ignored fungi, which turns out to play an important role too. The study found that certain fungal species are more common in people with fatty liver disease, and these fungi influence the metabolites (chemical compounds) in the blood that affect liver health. By combining information about fungi, bacteria, and blood chemistry, scientists developed a test that could identify fatty liver disease with 77% accuracy, suggesting that looking at gut fungi could help doctors diagnose and treat this common liver condition.

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