Report covers take-home points from the 2017 Gut Microbiota for Health World Summit in Paris
19 Jul 2017by GMFH Editing Team
The GMFH editing team is pleased to bring you the Gut Summit 2017 official report.
by GMFH Editing Team
The GMFH editing team is pleased to bring you the Gut Summit 2017 official report.
by GMFH Editing Team
The workshop —called “Nutrition and the human gut microbiome: What should health professionals know for their daily practice?”— addressed issues and questions relevant to nutrition practice.
by Kristina Campbell
In the new Gut Microbiota for Health “Clinical Minute” series, we get a scientific expert’s take on gut-microbiota-related questions to healthcare professionals.
by GMFH Editing Team
GMFH is pleased to announce that, at two important upcoming conferences, our initiative has lent its support to a series of sessions on gut microbiota and nutrition, bringing together an international lineup of experts to speak about concrete applications of the science.
by Andreu Prados
A new double-blind, randomised has found that changes in gut microbiome composition following treatment with a probiotic are related to microbial translocation and inflammation in HIV-infected patients undergoing standard treatments.
A recent review explores the evidence that exists for how dietary modulation of gut microbiota composition occurs, and the extent to which it depends on inter-individual microbiota variation in humans.
by GMFH Editing Team
“Standing room only” was reported from the microbiome presentations at the recent Digestive Disease Week 2017 (#DDW17)—not an unusual circumstance at academic and medical conferences all around the world.
by Andreu Prados
A recent review, led by Dr. Wilson Liao from the Department of Dermatology at the University of California (San Francisco), has explored how specific dietary components and dietary patterns interact with the gut microbiome.
by Andreu Prados
A recent narrative review has suggested that probiotics and rebamipide could be useful for addressing NSAID-induced small intestinal damage.
by Paul Enck
A recent Cochrane review, led by Prof. Angela Webster from the Sydney School of Public Health at The University of Sydney (Australia), has found that probiotics may not be better than lactulose for hepatic encephalopathy.