High levels of gut bacterial toxin trigger lupus nephritis
The body's immune reaction to increased levels of a toxic molecule, part of a bacterial species in the human gut, may reveal who is most at risk of developing lupus nephritis, according to a new study led by NYU Langone Health. In people with the disease, which often leads to long-term kidney damage
ORIGINAL SOURCE →via Medical Xpress
ADVERTISEMENT
⚡ STAY AHEAD
Events like this, convergence-verified across 689 sources, land in your inbox every Sunday. Free.
GET THE SUNDAY BRIEFING →RELATED · health
- [HEALTH] Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices Regarding Arboviruses at a Human-Wildlife Interface: A Cross-Sectional Study in and
- [HEALTH] Trk1 potassium transport is crucial for effective Candidozyma auris skin colonization.
- [HEALTH] [A rapid visual detection method for porcine circovirus type 4 based on enzymatic recombinase amplification and CRISPR/E
- [HEALTH] Trump considering plan to send Afghan refugees who helped US to Congo - NYT
- [HEALTH] Tamil Nadu polls: Tamakkal registers highest turnout, Nilgiris lowest until 9am
- [HEALTH] Scientists filmed Uganda’s Marburg virus hotspot for 5 months. Here’s what they found