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The role of the bacterial microbiome in lung disease.

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors review and synthesize published reports of the lung microbiota of healthy and diseased subjects, discuss trends of microbial diversity and constitution across disease states, and look to the extrapulmonary microbiome for hypotheses and future directions for study.
Abstract
Novel culture-independent techniques have recently demonstrated that the lower respiratory tract, historically considered sterile in health, contains diverse communities of microbes: the lung microbiome. Increasing evidence supports the concept that a distinct microbiota of the lower respiratory tract is present both in health and in various respiratory diseases, although the biological and clinical significance of these findings remains undetermined. In this article, the authors review and synthesize published reports of the lung microbiota of healthy and diseased subjects, discuss trends of microbial diversity and constitution across disease states, and look to the extrapulmonary microbiome for hypotheses and future directions for study.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis of the Upper Respiratory Tract Microbiotas as the Source of the Lung and Gastric Microbiotas in Healthy Individuals

TL;DR: Molecular immigration from the oral cavity appears to be the significant source of the lung microbiome during health, but unlike the stomach, the lungs exhibit evidence of selective elimination of Prevotella bacteria derived from the upper airways.
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The Microbiome and the Respiratory Tract

TL;DR: The topography and population dynamics of the respiratory tract is described, both in health and as altered by acute and chronic lung disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Respiratory epithelial cells orchestrate pulmonary innate immunity

TL;DR: The biophysical nature of pulmonary host defenses are integrated with the ability of respiratory epithelial cells to respond to and 'instruct' the professional immune system to protect the lungs from infection and injury.
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The emerging world of the fungal microbiome.

TL;DR: The study of the fungal microbiota is a new and rapidly emerging field that lags behind the authors' understanding of the bacterial microbiome, especially as a reservoir for blooms of pathogenic microbes when the host is compromised and as a potential cofactor in inflammatory diseases and metabolic disorders.
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Spatial Variation in the Healthy Human Lung Microbiome and the Adapted Island Model of Lung Biogeography

TL;DR: The lung microbiome in health is more influenced by microbial immigration and elimination (the adapted island model) than by the effects of local growth conditions on bacterial reproduction rates, which are more determinant in advanced lung diseases.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Allergy development and the intestinal microflora during the first year of life

TL;DR: Differences in the composition of the gut flora between infant who will and infants who will not develop allergy are demonstrable before the development of any clinical manifestations of atopy.
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Infection in the Pathogenesis and Course of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

TL;DR: New molecular, cellular, and immunologic techniques used to study host–pathogen interactions have led to a reexamination of the role of infection in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cystic fibrosis of the pancreas and its relation to celiac disease: a clinical and pathologic study

TL;DR: The pathology and pathologic physiology of celiac disease remain obscure in spite of the many attempts that have been made to understand them and few cases of either disease in which careful clinical observations have been followed by adequate postmortem examination are revealed.
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Systematic review of intestinal microbiota transplantation (fecal bacteriotherapy) for recurrent Clostridium difficile infection.

TL;DR: Effectiveness varied by route of instillation, relationship to stool donor, volume of IMT given, and treatment before infusion, but findings can guide physicians interested in implementing the procedure until better designed studies are conducted to confirm best practices.
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