Maintaining health by balancing microbial exposure and prevention of infection: The hygiene hypothesis versus the hypothesis of early immune challenge

From National Research Council Canada

DOIResolve DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/S0195-6701(13)60007-9
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Affiliation
  1. National Research Council of Canada. Construction
FormatText, Article
Subjectantiinflammatory activity; asthma; atopy; autoimmune disease; bacterial flora; Crohn disease; cross infection; early immune challenge hypothesis; enteritis; exposure; hay fever; Helicobacter infection; Heligmosomoides polygyrus; helper cell; host parasite interaction; host pathogen interaction; hygiene hypothesis; hypothesis; immune response; immunological tolerance; immunoregulation; immunostimulation; infection; infection prevention; inflammation; innate immunity; microbial colonization; microorganism; parasite; phylogeny; regulatory T lymphocyte; Schistosoma; Schistosoma mansoni; Th1 cell; Th17 cell; Toxoplasma gondii; Trichuris suis; Autoimmune Diseases; Health; Hygiene Hypothesis; Hypersensitivity; Incidence
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LanguageEnglish
Peer reviewedYes
NPARC number21269894
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Record identifiercf19fc41-9fb2-469e-8ad0-099dcacb71c5
Record created2013-12-13
Record modified2024-03-18
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