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Tine De Ryck

Researcher at Ghent University

Publications -  13
Citations -  359

Tine De Ryck is an academic researcher from Ghent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mucositis & Wound healing. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 13 publications receiving 299 citations. Previous affiliations of Tine De Ryck include Ghent University Hospital.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The HMI™ module: a new tool to study the Host-Microbiota Interaction in the human gastrointestinal tract in vitro

TL;DR: The HMI module offers the possibility of co-culturing a gut representative microbial community with enterocyte-like cells up to 48 h and may therefore contribute to the mechanistic understanding of host-microbiome interactions.
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Westernized diets lower arsenic gastrointestinal bioaccessibility but increase microbial arsenic speciation changes in the colon.

TL;DR: Dietary background is a crucial parameter to incorporate when predicting bioavailability with bioaccessibility measurements and when assessing health risks from As following oral exposure.
Patent

Anti-invasive compounds

TL;DR: In this paper, a method for predicting the anti-invasive activity of chalcone-like compounds was proposed. But this method is not suitable for the use in the prevention and/or treatment of diseases associated with undesired cell invasion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low-dose irradiation affects the functional behavior of oral microbiota in the context of mucositis.

TL;DR: It is indicated that low-dose irradiation can have an impact on functional characteristics of microbial species and screening for pathogens like K. oxytoca in the context of mucosits could be useful to allow early detection and immediate intervention.
Journal ArticleDOI

Development of an oral mucosa model to study host-microbiome interactions during wound healing.

TL;DR: The model proposed, consisting of an oral epithelium and biofilm, can be used to study microbe-host crosstalk in vitro in non-infectious conditions up to 72 h and is applicable for investigations within fundamental research and for the discovery and development of agents that promote wound healing.