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A Pilot Study of the Effect of Deployment on the Gut Microbiome and Traveler’s Diarrhea Susceptibility

Blake W. Stamps, Wanda J. Lyon, Adam P. Irvin, Nancy Kelley‐Loughnane, Michael S. Goodson

2020Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Traveler’s diarrhea (TD) is a recurrent and significant issue for many travelers including the military. While many known enteric pathogens exist that are causative agents of diarrhea, our gut microbiome may also play a role in TD susceptibility. To this end, we conducted a pilot study of the microbiome of warfighters prior to- and after deployment overseas to identify marker taxa relevant to TD. This initial study utilized full-length 16S rRNA gene sequencing to provide additional taxonomic resolution toward identifying predictive taxa.16S rRNA analyses of pre- and post-deployment fecal samples identified multiple marker taxa as significantly differentially abundant in subjects that reported diarrhea, including Weissella , Butyrivibrio , Corynebacterium , uncultivated Erysipelotrichaceae, Jeotgallibaca , unclassified Ktedonobacteriaceae, Leptolinea , and uncultivated Ruminiococcaceae. The ability to identify TD risk prior to travel will inform prevention and mitigation strategies to influence diarrhea susceptibility while traveling.

Topics & Concepts

Traveler's diarrheaDiarrheaGut microbiomeMicrobiomeSoftware deploymentMedicineMicrobiologyImmunologyBiologyVirologyBioinformaticsInternal medicineComputer scienceOperating systemGut microbiota and healthNutrition, Health and Food BehaviorDiet and metabolism studies
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