14 research outputs found
Su1949 – Small Intestinal Aspirates Require Specific Treatment to Optimize Microbial Analysis: Validation of a Novel Technique from the Reimagine Study
Quantitative sequencing clarifies the role of disruptor taxa, the oral microbiome, and strict anaerobes in the human small-intestine microbiome
Raw data and processing scripts for manuscript. All processing scripts are python jupyter notebooks. Unzip data file folders and keep the folder hierarchy as is or alter path locations in jupyter notebooks
Sa1900 – Interobserver Agreement Among Endoscopists in Evaluating Colonic Inflammation in Mice
The duodenal microbiome is altered in small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) is highly prevalent and is associated with numerous gastrointestinal disorders, but the microbes involved remain poorly defined. Moreover, existing studies of microbiome alterations in SIBO have utilized stool samples, which are not representative of the entire gastrointestinal tract. Therefore, we aimed to determine and compare the duodenal microbiome composition in SIBO and non-SIBO subjects, using duodenal aspirates from subjects undergoing standard-of-care esophagogastroduodenoscopy without colon preparation. Using the recently-redefined cutoff for SIBO of >103 colony forming units per milliliter (CFU/mL), 42 SIBO and 98 non-SIBO subjects were identified. Duodenal samples from SIBO subjects had 4x103-fold higher counts than non-SIBO subjects when plated on MacConkey agar (P103 CFU/mL cutoff for the definition of SIBO, and also reveal specific overgrowth of Proteobacteria in SIBO vs. non-SIBO subjects, coupled with an altered Proteobacterial profile that correlates with symptom severity. Future research may elucidate host-microbiome interactions underlying these symptoms in SIBO patients