What is it about?
Blood is not free of bacteria. It is full of bacterial genes even among healthy people. These include bacteria such as Pseudomonas, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus and many others. However, they may not be traditionally believed harmful bacteria that cause infections. They exist in more primitive forms without cell walls and hence cannot be grown by regular culture methods used in clinical practice. There is a whole community of different such bacteria which are labelled as the blood microbiota. This community of bacteria changes when one develops a disease. Our study saw changes in bacteria in patients with kidney disease when compared to healthy people. We also found lesser diversity of bacteria in kidney disease patients when compared to healthy people.
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Why is it important?
Scientific studies are finding that a healthy blood is not sterile (free of bacteria) but rather a complex community of primitive bacteria (bacteria without cell walls that cannot be grown in culture media) that live in symbiosis with the human body to maintain health. This community of bacteria are called bacterial microbiota and their genes is collectively called the bacterial microbiome. A balanced and diverse bacterial microbiota and microbiome in blood is essential in maintaining health. Loss of this balance and diversity has been observed in chronic kidney disease. Measuring and understanding the blood microbiota in future could help in identifying individual state of health and possibly diagnosing and predicting kidney diseases as well as identifying treatment options targeting the human blood microbiome.
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This page is a summary of: Blood Microbiome Profile in CKD, Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, April 2019, American Society of Nephrology,
DOI: 10.2215/cjn.12161018.
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