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      Shifting the balance: antibiotic effects on host-microbiota mutualism.

      Nature reviews. Microbiology
      Animals, Anti-Bacterial Agents, pharmacology, therapeutic use, Bacteria, drug effects, metabolism, Bacterial Infections, drug therapy, microbiology, Biomass, Disease Susceptibility, Enterocolitis, Pseudomembranous, etiology, Fatty Acids, Volatile, Gastrointestinal Tract, immunology, Homeostasis, Host-Pathogen Interactions, Humans, Immunity, Mucosal, Metagenome, Microbial Interactions

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          Abstract

          Antibiotics have been used effectively as a means to treat bacterial infections in humans and animals for over half a century. However, through their use, lasting alterations are being made to a mutualistic relationship that has taken millennia to evolve: the relationship between the host and its microbiota. Host-microbiota interactions are dynamic; therefore, changes in the microbiota as a consequence of antibiotic treatment can result in the dysregulation of host immune homeostasis and an increased susceptibility to disease. A better understanding of both the changes in the microbiota as a result of antibiotic treatment and the consequential changes in host immune homeostasis is imperative, so that these effects can be mitigated.

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