Publications by authors named "Emily F Wissel"

The microbiota-gut-brain axis facilitates communication between the gut microbiota and the brain. It has implications for health and environmental policy. Microbiota are linked to neurological and metabolic disorders, and our exposure to health-promoting microbiota depends on environmental quality.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates risk and protective factors affecting vaginal microbiome health in pregnant African American women, focused on the impact of lifestyle and living situations on the presence of certain bacteria.
  • - A total of 436 participants provided self-collected vaginal samples during early pregnancy, along with self-reported data on sociodemographic details and health behaviors.
  • - Findings suggest that recent marijuana use and living arrangements (not cohabitating with a partner) are linked to greater diversity in vaginal microbiota, highlighting the need to consider these factors in future research on vaginal health.
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Background: There are about 15 million Americans working full-time on evening, night, or rotating shifts. Between 48% and 81.9% of those working rotating or night shifts report abdominal pain, constipation, diarrhea and other symptoms of functional bowel disorders.

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Host-associated microbiomes can be critical for the health and proper development of animals and plants. The answers to many fundamental questions regarding the modes of acquisition and microevolution of microbiome communities remain to be established. Deciphering strain-level dynamics is essential to fully understand how microbial communities evolve, but the forces shaping the strain-level dynamics of microbial communities remain largely unexplored, mostly because of methodological issues and cost.

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Objectives/hypothesis: Recent research has examined the nasal microbiome in rhinosinusitis and nondiseased states. Given immunologic alterations in allergic rhinitis (AR) and after allergen immunotherapy (IT), we evaluated the nasal microbiome in these conditions.

Study Design: Cross-sectional comparison.

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Recent data suggest that the human body is not so exclusively human after all. Specifically, humans share their bodies with approximately 10 trillion microorganisms, collectively known as the microbiome. Chief among these microbes are bacteria, and there is a growing consensus that they are critical to virtually all facets of normative functioning.

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