Publications by authors named "D E Bays"

The gut microbiome, composed of the colonic microbiota and their host environment, is important for many aspects of human health. A gut microbiome imbalance (gut dysbiosis) is associated with major causes of human morbidity and mortality. Despite the central part our gut microbiome plays in health and disease, mechanisms that maintain homeostasis and properties that demarcate dysbiosis remain largely undefined.

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Article Synopsis
  • * There has been a shift from infections primarily caused by drug-susceptible species to an increase in non-susceptible species, leading to greater treatment difficulties due to rising drug resistance.
  • * With more patients at risk due to advances in cancer treatment and the emergence of resistant strains of Candida, understanding these changes is crucial for developing effective management and prevention strategies.
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The gut microbiota prevents harmful microbes from entering the body, a function known as colonization resistance. The enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar (S.) Typhimurium uses its virulence factors to break colonization resistance through unknown mechanisms.

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Antibiotic treatment promotes the outgrowth of intestinal Candida albicans, but the mechanisms driving this fungal bloom remain incompletely understood. We identify oxygen as a resource required for post-antibiotic C. albicans expansion.

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Background: Severe coccidioidomycosis presenting with respiratory failure is an uncommon manifestation of disease. Current knowledge of this condition is limited to case reports and small case series.

Methods: A retrospective multicenter review of patients with coccidioidomycosis-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (CA-ARDS) was conducted.

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