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Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Food & Water Gut & Microbiome Human Health Effects Nanoplastics Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Epithelial barrier hypothesis: Effect of the external exposome on the microbiome and epithelial barriers in allergic disease

Allergy 2022 371 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 65 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Yasutaka Mitamura, Cevdet Özdemir, Cezmi A. Akdiş, İsmail Öğülür, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, İsmail Öğülür, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Kari C. Nadeau İsmail Öğülür, İsmail Öğülür, İsmail Öğülür, İsmail Öğülür, Betül Özdel Öztürk, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Ümüş Özbey Yücel, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau İsmail Öğülür, Cezmi A. Akdiş, İsmail Öğülür, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Pamir Çerçi, Seda Altıner, Yasutaka Mitamura, Murat Türk, Mübeccel Akdiş, Yasutaka Mitamura, İsmail Öğülür, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Betül Özdel Öztürk, Begüm Görgülü Akın, Mübeccel Akdiş, İsmail Öğülür, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Yasutaka Mitamura, Pamir Çerçi, Murat Türk, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Yasutaka Mitamura, Yasutaka Mitamura, Mübeccel Akdiş, Seda Altıner, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Yasutaka Mitamura, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Ümüş Özbey Yücel, İnsu Yılmaz, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, İsmail Öğülür, Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Zeynep Çelebi Sözener, Mübeccel Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Yasutaka Mitamura, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Cevdet Özdemir, Cezmi A. Akdiş, İnsu Yılmaz, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Dilşad Mungan, Kari C. Nadeau İsmail Öğülür, Mübeccel Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, İsmail Öğülür, İsmail Öğülür, İsmail Öğülür, Cevdet Özdemir, Yasutaka Mitamura, Yasutaka Mitamura, Kari C. Nadeau Kari C. Nadeau Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Dilşad Mungan, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau Mübeccel Akdiş, Cezmi A. Akdiş, Kari C. Nadeau

Summary

This review proposes the 'epithelial barrier hypothesis,' which suggests that modern environmental exposures, including microplastics, air pollution, and processed food additives, are damaging the protective barriers of our skin, gut, and airways. When these barriers break down, foreign substances and bacteria can enter the body and trigger allergic and inflammatory diseases, which have been increasing rapidly in recent decades. The research suggests microplastics may be one of many environmental factors driving the rise in conditions like asthma, food allergies, and eczema.

Environmental exposure plays a major role in the development of allergic diseases. The exposome can be classified into internal (e.g., aging, hormones, and metabolic processes), specific external (e.g., chemical pollutants or lifestyle factors), and general external (e.g., broader socioeconomic and psychological contexts) domains, all of which are interrelated. All the factors we are exposed to, from the moment of conception to death, are part of the external exposome. Several hundreds of thousands of new chemicals have been introduced in modern life without our having a full understanding of their toxic health effects and ways to mitigate these effects. Climate change, air pollution, microplastics, tobacco smoke, changes and loss of biodiversity, alterations in dietary habits, and the microbiome due to modernization, urbanization, and globalization constitute our surrounding environment and external exposome. Some of these factors disrupt the epithelial barriers of the skin and mucosal surfaces, and these disruptions have been linked in the last few decades to the increasing prevalence and severity of allergic and inflammatory diseases such as atopic dermatitis, food allergy, allergic rhinitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, eosinophilic esophagitis, and asthma. The epithelial barrier hypothesis provides a mechanistic explanation of how these factors can explain the rapid increase in allergic and autoimmune diseases. In this review, we discuss factors affecting the planet's health in the context of the 'epithelial barrier hypothesis,' including climate change, pollution, changes and loss of biodiversity, and emphasize the changes in the external exposome in the last few decades and their effects on allergic diseases. In addition, the roles of increased dietary fatty acid consumption and environmental substances (detergents, airborne pollen, ozone, microplastics, nanoparticles, and tobacco) affecting epithelial barriers are discussed. Considering the emerging data from recent studies, we suggest stringent governmental regulations, global policy adjustments, patient education, and the establishment of individualized control measures to mitigate environmental threats and decrease allergic disease.

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