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Health Challenges of the Pacific Region: Insights From History Geography Social Determinants Genetics and the Microbiome

机译:太平洋地区的健康挑战:历史地理社会决定因素遗传学和微生物组的见解

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摘要

The Pacific region, also referred to as Oceania, is a geographically widespread region populated by people of diverse cultures and ethnicities. Indigenous people in the region (Melanesians, Polynesians, Micronesians, Papuans, and Indigenous Australians) are over-represented on national, regional, and global scales for the burden of infectious and non-communicable diseases. Although social and environmental factors such as poverty, education, and access to health-care are assumed to be major drivers of this disease burden, there is also developing evidence that genetic and microbiotic factors should also be considered. To date, studies investigating genetic and/or microbiotic links with vulnerabilities to infectious and non-communicable diseases have mostly focused on populations in Europe, Asia, and USA, with uncertain associations for other populations such as indigenous communities in Oceania. Recent developments in personalized medicine have shown that identifying ethnicity-linked genetic vulnerabilities can be important for medical management. Although our understanding of the impacts of the gut microbiome on health is still in the early stages, it is likely that equivalent vulnerabilities will also be identified through the interaction between gut microbiome composition and function with pathogens and the host immune system. As rapid economic, dietary, and cultural changes occur throughout Oceania it becomes increasingly important that further research is conducted within indigenous populations to address the double burden of high rates of infectious diseases and rapidly rising non-communicable diseases so that comprehensive development goals can be planned. In this article, we review the current knowledge on the impact of nutrition, genetics, and the gut microbiome on infectious diseases in indigenous people of the Pacific region.
机译:太平洋地区,也称为大洋洲,是一个地理分布广泛的地区,由不同文化和种族的人居住。该地区的土著人民(梅拉尼西亚人,波利尼西亚人,密克罗尼西亚人,巴布亚人和澳大利亚土著人)在传染病和非传染性疾病的负担上在国家,地区和全球范围内的人数过多。尽管假定社会,环境因素(例如贫困,教育和获得医疗服务)是造成这种疾病负担的主要因素,但越来越多的证据表明,遗传和微生物因素也应予以考虑。迄今为止,有关遗传和/或微生物与传染病和非传染性疾病易感性联系的研究主要集中在欧洲,亚洲和美国的人群,与其他人群(例如大洋洲的土著社区)的关联不确定。个性化医学的最新发展表明,识别种族相关的遗传漏洞对于医疗管理可能很重要。尽管我们对肠道微生物组对健康的影响的了解仍处于早期阶段,但很可能通过肠道微生物组的组成和功能与病原体和宿主免疫系统之间的相互作用,也可以识别出相同的漏洞。随着大洋洲各地经济,饮食和文化的快速变化,在土著居民中开展进一步研究以解决传染病高发和非传染性疾病迅速上升的双重负担变得越来越重要,因此可以制定全面的发展目标。在本文中,我们回顾了有关营养,遗传学和肠道微生物组对太平洋地区土著人民传染病影响的最新知识。

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