Drugging Gut Bacteria Could Prevent Heart Disease-Study
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NEW YORK: Confirming links between gut bacteria and heart disease, researchers have demonstrated that targeting microbes in the gut may prevent heart disease brought on by nutrients contained in a diet rich in red meat, eggs and high-fat dairy products.
"These studies demonstrate the exciting possibility that we can prevent or retard the progression of diet-induced heart diseases starting in the gut," said one of the researchers Stanley Hazen from Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute in Ohio, US.
"This opens the door in the future for new types of therapies for atherosclerosis, as well as other metabolic diseases," Hazen noted.
This novel approach centers around the research team's previous discovery that TMAO -- trimethylamine N-oxide, a byproduct formed in the gut during digestion of animal fats -- is linked to atherosclerosis, a disease of the arteries characterised by the deposition of fatty material on their inner walls, and heart disease.
"These studies demonstrate the exciting possibility that we can prevent or retard the progression of diet-induced heart diseases starting in the gut," said one of the researchers Stanley Hazen from Cleveland Clinic Lerner Research Institute in Ohio, US.
"This opens the door in the future for new types of therapies for atherosclerosis, as well as other metabolic diseases," Hazen noted.
This novel approach centers around the research team's previous discovery that TMAO -- trimethylamine N-oxide, a byproduct formed in the gut during digestion of animal fats -- is linked to atherosclerosis, a disease of the arteries characterised by the deposition of fatty material on their inner walls, and heart disease.
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