Probiotic therapies involve the use of living microorganisms to treat or prevent disease. A number of creative applications are being developed for treatment of colitis, prevention of dental caries, and control of infectious disease. Some of these applications are likely to involve genetically modified strains of bacteria. Look for more of these in the next decade.
BibTeX
@Manual{stream2008-181, title = {Probiotics take a knock in the gut?}, journal = {STREAM research}, author = {Jonathan Kimmelman}, address = {Montreal, Canada}, date = 2008, month = feb, day = 19, url = {http://www.translationalethics.com/2008/02/19/probiotics-take-a-knock-in-the-gut/} }
MLA
Jonathan Kimmelman. "Probiotics take a knock in the gut?" Web blog post. STREAM research. 19 Feb 2008. Web. 10 Jan 2025. <http://www.translationalethics.com/2008/02/19/probiotics-take-a-knock-in-the-gut/>
APA
Jonathan Kimmelman. (2008, Feb 19). Probiotics take a knock in the gut? [Web log post]. Retrieved from http://www.translationalethics.com/2008/02/19/probiotics-take-a-knock-in-the-gut/
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