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Gut microbiota analyses of Saudi populations for type 2 diabetes-related phenotypes reveals significant association.

Fahad A Al-MuhannaAlexa K DowdellAbdulmohsen H Al EleqWaleed I AlbakerAndrew W BrooksAli I Al-SultanAbdullah M Al-RubaishKhaled R AlkharsahRaed M SulaimanAbdulaziz A Al-QuorainCyril CyrusRudaynah A AlaliChittibabu VatteFred L RobinsonXin ZhouMichael P SnyderAfnan F AlmuhannaBrendan J KeatingBrian D PieningAmein K Al-Ali
Published in: BMC microbiology (2022)
Based on diabetes status and glucose levels of Saudi participants, relatively stable differences in stool composition were perceived by differential abundance and alpha diversity measures. However, community level differences are evident in the Saudi population between T2D and non-T2D individuals, and diversity patterns appear to vary from well-characterized microbiota from Western cohorts. Comparing overlapping and varying patterns in gut microbiota with other studies is critical to assessing novel treatment options in light of a rapidly growing T2D health epidemic in the region. As a rapidly emerging chronic condition in Saudi Arabia and the Middle East, T2D burdens have grown more quickly and affect larger proportions of the population than any other global region, making a regional reference T2D-microbiome dataset critical to understanding the nuances of disease development on a global scale.
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