
pmid: 15710972
pmc: PMC1774411
Two distinct, but rapidly converging, areas of research (the hygiene hypothesis and the study of probiotic/prebiotic effects) have emphasised the need to understand, and ultimately to manipulate, our physiological interactions with commensal flora, and with other transient but harmless organisms from the environment that affect immunoregulatory circuits. The story began with allergic disorders but now inflammatory bowel disease is increasingly involved.
Probiotics, CHILDREN, Hygiene, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, DENDRITIC CELLS, PROBIOTICS, Intestines, Immune System Diseases, T-Lymphocyte Subsets, MYCOBACTERIUM-VACCAE, ATOPIC-DERMATITIS, Humans, REGULATORY T-CELLS, INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE, RESPONSES, SUPPRESSION
Probiotics, CHILDREN, Hygiene, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL, Inflammatory Bowel Diseases, DENDRITIC CELLS, PROBIOTICS, Intestines, Immune System Diseases, T-Lymphocyte Subsets, MYCOBACTERIUM-VACCAE, ATOPIC-DERMATITIS, Humans, REGULATORY T-CELLS, INFLAMMATORY-BOWEL-DISEASE, RESPONSES, SUPPRESSION
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