Role of Trimethylamine N-Oxide in Heart Failure
Lele Jing,
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Honghong Zhang,
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Qiannan Xiang
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et al.
Reviews in Cardiovascular Medicine,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
25(7)
Published: July 2, 2024
Heart
failure
(HF)
is
a
clinical
syndrome
characterizing
by
typical
physical
signs
and
symptomatology
resulting
from
reduced
cardiac
output
and/or
intracardiac
pressure
at
rest
or
under
stress
due
to
structural
functional
abnormalities
of
the
heart.
HF
often
final
stage
all
cardiovascular
diseases
significant
risk
factor
for
sudden
arrest,
death,
liver
kidney
failure.
Current
pharmacological
treatments
can
only
slow
progression
recurrence
HF.
With
advancing
research
into
gut
microbiome
its
metabolites,
one
such
trimethylamine
N-oxide
(TMAO)—has
been
implicated
in
advancement
correlated
with
poor
prognosis
patients
However,
precise
role
TMAO
has
not
yet
clarified.
This
review
highlights
concludes
available
evidence
potential
mechanisms
associated
HF,
hope
contributing
new
insights
diagnosis
prevention
Language: Английский
Helicobacter mastomyrinus infection induces autoimmune hepatitis in mice
Liqi Zhu,
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Yuanyuan Liang,
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Linghan Yang
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et al.
Journal of Translational Autoimmunity,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown, P. 100275 - 100275
Published: Jan. 1, 2025
Language: Английский
System Overview from Physiological and Pathological Standpoints
Published: Jan. 1, 2025
Language: Английский
Edible fungi polysaccharides modulate gut microbiota and lipid metabolism: A review
Huanyi Xu,
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Zhixiang Xue,
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Ping Wang
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et al.
International Journal of Biological Macromolecules,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
283, P. 137427 - 137427
Published: Nov. 12, 2024
Language: Английский
Possible immune mechanisms of gut microbiota and its metabolites in the occurrence and development of immune thrombocytopenia
Gengda Zhu,
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Lixiang Yan,
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Lijun Fang
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et al.
Frontiers in Microbiology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
15
Published: Aug. 7, 2024
Immune
thrombocytopenia
(ITP)
is
an
autoimmune
disease
characterized
by
increased
platelet
destruction
and
impaired
production,
leading
to
elevated
bleeding
tendency.
Recent
studies
have
demonstrated
important
link
between
the
gut
microbiota
onset
progression
of
several
immune
diseases
in
humans,
emphasizing
that
microbiota-derived
metabolites
play
a
non-negligible
role
diseases.
The
its
metabolites,
such
as
short-chain
fatty
acids,
oxidized
trimethylamine,
tryptophan
secondary
bile
acids
lipopolysaccharides,
can
alter
intestinal
barrier
permeability
modulating
cell
differentiation
cytokine
secretion,
which
turn
affects
systemic
function
host.
It
therefore
reasonable
hypothesize
ecological
dysregulation
may
be
entirely
new
factor
triggering
ITP.
This
article
reviews
potential
immune-related
mechanisms
representative
ITP,
well
influence
leaky
on
development
with
view
enriching
theoretical
system
ITP-related
microecology
providing
ideas
for
study
Language: Английский