Broncos To Get Down And Dirty Against Titans – Brisbane Broncos


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Broncos To Get Down And Dirty Against Titans
Brisbane Broncos
Due to ongoing asthma problems, Scott Anderson has been replaced by Dunamis Lui for tomorrow night's game. Despite the late change, Griffin says the Broncos will be at their 100% best for the rival match. “We're all fit and healthy, it's a matter of us
Broncos prop Scott Anderson to miss round 19 clash with TitansCourier Mail
Broncos prop pulls out of NRL derby clashNinemsn

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Gastric bacterium protects against asthma and proves hygiene hypothesis – Gizmag

Gastric bacterium protects against asthma and proves hygiene hypothesis
Gizmag
It's widely recognized that asthma rates have increased significantly since the 1960's and continue to rise. With increases in asthma and other allergic diseases centered on industrialized nations, a recent hypothesis suggested that the
Does H. Pylori Bacterium Protect Against Asthma?EmpowHer
Gastric Bacterium Infection Can Be Guarded to Allergy Induced AsthmaAccentedTouch
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GP online –Hindustan Times
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Does H. Pylori Bacterium Protect Against Asthma? – EmpowHer

Does H. Pylori Bacterium Protect Against Asthma?
EmpowHer
A July 1, 2011 article in Science Daily reported that the microorganism might actually help prevent asthma. Scientists from Switzerland and Germany who recently published their findings in the Journal of Clinical Investigation were looking in
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Vaccine-like jabs could stop asthmaGP online
Gastric bug H. pylori protects against asthmaTimes of India
Hindustan Times
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Gastric bug H. pylori protects against asthma – Times of India

Gastric bug H. pylori protects against asthma
Times of India
A gut bug, H. pylori, which infects half the global population and causes gastritis, gastric and duodenal ulcers and stomach cancer, has been found to protect against allergy-induced asthma. Scientists from the University of Zurich, Switzerland and
Queasy stomachs good for the lungsHindustan Times

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Gastric bug H. pylori protects against asthma – Mangalorean.com

Gastric bug H. pylori protects against asthma
Mangalorean.com
London, July 3 (IANS) A gut bug, H. pylori, which infects half the global population and causes gastritis, gastric and duodenal ulcers and stomach cancer, has been found to protect against allergy-induced asthma. Scientists from the University of
Queasy stomachs good for the lungsHindustan Times

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Gastric bacterium infection can protect against allergy-induced asthma – TruthDive


MedIndia

Gastric bacterium infection can protect against allergy-induced asthma
TruthDive
Washington, July 02 (ANI): Researchers have indicated that infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori provides reliable protection against allergy-induced asthma. The results confirmed the hypothesis recently put forward that the dramatic
Gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori protects against asthmaEurekAlert (press release)
Gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori allegedly guards against asthmaHealthJockey.com

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Asthma and Gastric Bacterium Helicobacter Pylori

Gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori protects against asthma Says new Study

Infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori provides reliable protection against allergy-induced asthma, immunologists from the University of Zurich have demonstrated in an animal model together with allergy specialists from the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz. Their results published in the prestigious Journal of Clinical Investigation confirm the hypothesis recently put forward that the dramatic increase in allergic diseases in industrial societies is linked to the rapid disappearance of specific micro-organisms that populate the human body.

Allergy-induced asthma has been on the increase in the industrialized world for decades and has virtually taken on epidemic proportions. The rapid rise in allergic airway disease is attributed to air pollution, smoking, the hygiene hypothesis and the widespread use of antibiotics. The hygiene hypothesis states that modern hygiene measures have led to a lack of exposure to infectious agents, which is important for the normal maturation of the immune system. In an article published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation, scientists from the University of Zurich and the University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz now reveal that the increase in asthma could be put down to the specific disappearance of the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) from Western societies.

H. pylori is resistant to gastric acid. According to estimates, around half of the world’s population might be infected with the bacteria. The affliction often has no symptoms, but under certain conditions can cause gastritis, gastric and duodenal ulcers, and stomach cancer. Consequently, H. pylori is often killed off with antibiotics as a precaution, even if the patient does not have any complaints.

Early infection with H. pylori protects against asthma

For their study, the researchers infected mice with H. pylori bacteria. If the mice were infected at the age of a few days old, they developed immunological tolerance to the bacterium and even reacted insignificantly – if at all – to strong, asthma-inducing allergens. Mice that were not infected with H. pylori until they had reached adulthood, however, had a much weaker defense. “Early infection impairs the maturation of the dendritic cells and triggers the accumulation of regulatory T-cells that are crucial for the suppression of asthma,” says Anne Müller, a professor of molecular cancer research at the University of Zurich, explaining the protective mechanism.

If regulatory T-cells were transferred from infected to uninfected mice, they too enjoyed effective protection against allergy-induced asthma. However, mice that had been infected early also lost their resistance to asthma-inducing allergens if H. pylori was killed off in them with the aid of antibiotics after the sensitization phase. According to lung and allergy specialist Christian Taube, a senior physician at III. Medical Clinic of the Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz, the new results confirm the hypothesis that the increase in allergic asthma in industrial nations is linked to the widespread use of antibiotics and the subsequent disappearance of micro-organisms that permanently populate the human body: “The study of these fundamental mechanisms is extremely important for us to understand asthma and be able to develop preventative and therapeutic strategies later on.”

Contact: Anne Mueller
mueller@imcr.uzh.ch
41-446-353-474
University of Zurich

Gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori protects against asthma – EurekAlert (press release)

Gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori protects against asthma
EurekAlert (press release)
Infection with the gastric bacterium Helicobacter pylori provides reliable protection against allergy-induced asthma, immunologists from the University of Zurich have demonstrated in an animal model together with allergy specialists from the University

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Pterostilbene may protect against asthma: Cell study – NutraIngredients-usa.com


NutraIngredients-usa.com

Pterostilbene may protect against asthma: Cell study
NutraIngredients-usa.com
Pterostilbene, a compound found in blueberries, may counteract the role of environmental pollutants and prevent the development of asthma, a study suggests for the first time. A study with human cells that line the airways indicated that a certain

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