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Gut, oral and nasal microbiota and Parkinson’s disease

Liang Shen

2020Microbial Cell Factories58 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) is the second most prevalent neurodegenerative disease, and in an effort to identify novel therapeutic target for this disease in recent years, human microbiota has attracted much interest. This paper briefly summarizes the main findings concerning the differences of human microbiome across several important mucosal interfaces, including nose, mouth, and gut between PD patients and controls as obtained from a total of 13 studies published since 2015, which covered a total of 943 PD patients and 831 matched controls from 6 countries. Overall, these studies supported the differences of gut microbiota between PD patients and matched controls, while significantly altered bacterial taxa among studies were not identical. Due to relatively limited number of available studies and covered patients, the associations between oral and nasal microbiota and PD remain inconclusive. The therapeutic and diagnostic potentials of gut microbiota for PD are discussed. More well-designed clinical studies recruiting large-scale PD patients are encouraged in future.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeDiseaseParkinson's diseaseGut floraHuman microbiomeNoseMedicineImmunologyHuman Microbiome ProjectHuman studiesBiologyBioinformaticsPathologyInternal medicineAnatomyDysphagia Assessment and ManagementOral and gingival health researchParkinson's Disease Mechanisms and Treatments
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