Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This article outlines the proposed 'syntrophic imbalance hypothesis' for etiology of bacterial endoparasitism diseases. This hypothesis involves microbes (archaea and bacteria) that exist in human body biofilms in syntrophic associations, where bacteria ferment nutrients to produce short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) that are used by methanogenic archaeons to produce methane. Overgrowth of archaea on human tissues (e.g., in association with intestines, teeth or lungs) results in excessive removal of SCFAs from the biofilms and this triggers bacteria in the free-living biofilm state to convert to the endoparasitic state and become intracellular in host cells where they incite inflammation and disease. The proposed model provides the mechanism to explain dysbiosis etiology of several human diseases, including gingivitis, leaky gut syndrome, Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome, among others.
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PMID:Syntrophic imbalance and the etiology of bacterial endoparasitism diseases. 2891 53

Many disorders of the digestive tract cause cutaneous manifestations that may be an indication of an underlying condition; hence dermatologist plays a key role in recommending that the patient see a gastroenterologist. Conversely, gastroenterologist often sees patients with mucocutaneous lesions suggesting possible association with well-known digestive disorders. Chronic inflammatory bowel diseases are the typical example of this essential collaboration between the two specialities. We report a case of Crohn's disease revealed by cheilitis granulomatosa. This study involved a 30-year old female patient followed up for cheilitis granulomatosa in the Department of Dermatology. Somatic examination was unremarkable apart from dermatologic lesions (indurated white faciolabial edema and diffuse gingivitis). Biopsy of the labial lesion revealed perivascular epithelioid and giant-cell granulomas without caseous necrosis. Ileocolonoscopy was performed due to suspected inflammatory colitis. It showed gaping and ulcerated Bauhin valve with slightly erythematous ileal mucosa. Anatomo-pathologic study objectified chronic inflammatory bowel disease (CIBD) such as ileocolic Crohn's disease. Patient's evolution was marked by some episodes of rectal bleeding with anoperineal lesions 6 months later: a wide anterior anal fissure with aphthous ulceration 5 cm from the anal margin, complicated, a few weeks later, by the onset of perianal fistulized abscess requiring surgical drainage and seton installation. Hence the indication for thorough treatment of Crohn's disease after complete drying up of the abscess. Dermatologic lesions vary in patients with CIBD. In some cases, they occur in patients with IBD whereas, in other cases, they precede or accompany digestive manifestations, allowing diagnosis of sometimes clinically latent bowel disease.
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PMID:[Cheilitis granulomatosa revealing Crohn's disease]. 3037 93

The human microbiome is composed of four major areas including intestinal, skin, vaginal, and oral microbiomes, with each area containing unique species and unique functionalities. The human microbiome may be modulated with prebiotics, probiotics, and postbiotics to potentially aid in the treatment of diseases like irritable bowel syndrome, bacterial vaginosis, atopic dermatitis, gingivitis, obesity, or cancer. There is also potential for many of the inhabitants of the human microbiome to directly modulate host gene expression and modulate host detoxifying enzyme activity like cytochrome P450s (CYPs), dehydrogenases, and carboxylesterases. Therefore, the microbiome may be important to consider during drug discovery, risk assessment, and dosing regimens for various diseases given that the human microbiome has been shown to impact host detoxification processes.
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PMID:Interplay Between the Host, the Human Microbiome, and Drug Metabolism. 3118 74