Helicobacter pylori: the balance between a role as colonizer and pathogen.

Best Pract Res Clin Gastroenterol

Department of Medicine and Microbiology, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, NY, USA. Electronic address:

Published: December 2014

The isolation of Helicobacter pylori from the human stomach produced significant changes in how gastroenterologists, immunologists, epidemiologists, pathologists and microbiologists have approached gastro-duodenal diseases in the last half of the XX century. However, research of this organism has progressed greatly in the first decade of this century, evidence suggest that H. pylori is associated with disease only in humans older than 40 years, while, the lack of H. pylori colonization is associated with the emergence of new diseases, particularly in younger individuals. These differing effects of H. pylori colonization have created two contrasting concepts: the 'bad' and the 'good' Helicobacter. Following from renewed interest in the normal human microbiome, we need to reconsider our definitions and perhaps recognize that H. pylori might be a normal member of the human gastric microbiome in ancient humans that gradually, as results of the improvement in our environment, is disappearing.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bpg.2014.09.003DOI Listing

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