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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Gene by environment interactions
- Epidemiological findings
- The floor plan of a typical French farmhouse
- Asthma/allergy development and farming exposure
- Endotoxin in bedding as a surrogate marker
- Lymphocyte subsets
- Lack of infections and extra Th2
- Immunoregulatory disorders' increasing incidence
- Asthma and type 1 diabetes occurrence
- Disease types increasing in developed countries
- Generating regulatory T cells
- Treg cells development is controlled by Foxp3
- Defective Treg in chronic inflammatory disorders
- IL-10-secreting regulatory T cells deficiency
- Treg might inhibit the 3 types of diseases
- A deficit in regulation of the immune system
- Evolution turns the inevitable into a necessity
- Organisms implicated in the hygiene hypothesis
- Scheme of organism in human evolutionary history
- Avoidance of an inflammatory response
- The dendritic cell (DC): identify friend or foe (1)
- The dendritic cell (DC): Identify friend or foe (2)
- The immune response to the microfilariae
- "Old friends" alter the phenotype of dendritic cells
- PRR and the hygiene hypothesis
- The innate immune involvement in Treg induction
- Responses induced by environmental organisms
- Old friends' and Treg induction scheme (1)
- Mouse model of allergic asthma
- Some organisms shown to induce Treg
- Bystander Treg suppression induced by M.vaccae
- Old friends' and Treg induction scheme (2)
- Bystander anti-inflammatory activity
- Testing the efficacy of mycobacterium
- M. vaccae active via oral route in model of asthma
- The underlying hypothesis
- Prebiotics, probiotics and immunoregulation
- Do the "old friends" show activity in clinical trials?
- A probiotics as protection against eczema
- Treating IBD with Trichuris suis
- Summary
- What does the word "hygiene" actually refer to?
- Limitations of the "hygiene hypothesis"
- Conclusions
Topics Covered
- Definition of the hygiene hypothesis
- Gene-environment interactions
- Protection from allergic disorders by the farming environment
- Changing incidences of allergic disorders, autoimmunity and inflammatory bowel disease
- Deficient regulatory T cell activity in chronic inflammatory disorders
- Environmental microorganisms, immunoregulation and mammalian evolution
- Changing microbial exposure in developed countries
- Regulatory T lymphocytes and regulation of inflammation
- Animal models
- Cellular mechanisms
- Clinical trials
Links
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Talk Citation
Rook, G. (2007, October 1). The hygiene hypothesis [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/DDOE9737.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Graham Rook has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.