Read Missing Microbes: How the Overuse of Antibiotics Is Fueling Our Modern Plagues Online
Authors: MD Martin J. Blaser
resistant
terminology
transfer during childbirth
world of
see also
bacteria;
specific microbes
microbiome
disappearance hypothesis
human
milk
breast
Miller, Anne
Miller, C. Phillip
molds
Penicillium
mosquitoes
mouse studies
STAT experiments
mouth
MRSA
mucus
Mueller, Anne
narrow-spectrum antibiotics
Nash, John
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
natural selection
nervous system
Netherlands
New Guinea, tribes in
New World
New York University
NHANES (National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey)
nitrogen
nitromidazoles
Nobel, Brandon
Nobel, Yael
Nobel Prize
Nomura, Abraham
normal flora
nose
nurses
nut allergies
Obama, Barack
obesity
antibiotics and
childhood
C-section and
STAT experiments
oceans
odors, microbial
oligosaccharides
oral contraceptives
ovarian cancer
Oxalobacter
oxytetracycline
oxytocin
pancreas, and diabetes
panspermia hypothesis
parasites
paratyphoid
Pasteur, Louis
PAT experiments
pathogens
antibiotic-resistant
antibiotic winter and
epidemic
H. pylori
discovered as
latency
population growth and
as predators
rise of
see also specific pathogens
pathology
Peek, Richard
Peggy Lillis Memorial Foundation
penicillin
allergy
childhood obesity and
discovery of
first use of
in pregnancy and birth
resistance to
Penicillium
molds
Peoria, Illinois
Pérez-Pérez, Guillermo
peristalsis
peritoneum
Perlino, Carl
phages
pharmaceutical companies
“broad-spectrum” approach
failure to develop new antibiotics
growth promotion and
H. pylori
and
profits
pine beetle
placebo effect
plague
Plasmodium falciparum
plastic
Plottel, Claudia
pneumococcus
pneumonia
polio
pollution
population growth
prebiotics
pregnancy
antibiotic used in
bacteria and
DES and thalidomide used in
diabetes and
probiotics
prokaryotes
prontosil, first sulfa drug
proteins
H. pylori
protists
public health
puerperal sepsis
Quammen, David
rabies
Reibman, Joan
reptiles
resistance, antibiotic
ancient nature of
antibiotic winter
C. diff
infections
failure to develop new antibiotics
growth promotion and
MRSA
Salmonella
respiratory infections
Revolutionary War
rheumatic fever
rickettsia
Rocky Mountain spotted fever
Rosebury, Theodore
rubella
rumen bacteria
Salmonella
Salmonella typhi
Salvarsan
sanitation
sanitizers
SARS
scarlet fever
Schwarz, Dragutin
Semmelweis, Ignatz
serotonin
sex
Sheskin, David
shingles
short-chain fatty acids (SCFA)
silver nitrate
sinus infections
skeletons
skin bacteria
childbirth and
Skirrow, Martin
smallpox
soil
solutions
diagnostics
fecal microbiota transfer
narrow-spectrum drugs
probiotics
reduced prescription of antibiotics
restoring missing microbes
Soper, George
spinal tap
Stanford, Leland, Jr.
Staph
infections
Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus epidermidis
STAT experiments
stomach
acid
cancer, and
H. pylori
H. pylori
in
inflammation
strep infections
strep throat
streptococci, including Group B
Streptococcus pneumoniae
streptomycin
sulfa drugs
sulfonamide
superbugs
surgical infections
survival of the fittest
symbiosis
synbiotics
syphilis
Taft, William Howard
T-cells
teeth
testosterone
tetracycline
thalidomide
throat infections
TransSTAT
Trasande, Leo
T-reg cells
triclosan
Trinidad, bubbling tar lake
tuberculosis
turista (Montezuma’s revenge)
tylosin
typhoid
Typhoid Mary (Mary Mallon)
typhus
ulcerative colitis
ulcers
H. pylori
and
University of Colorado Medical Center
urban growth
urea
urinary tract infections
VA (Veterans Affairs) hospital
VacA
vaccines
vagina
bacteria
birth
cancer
episiotomy
microbe transfer during childbirth
Vanderbilt University
varicella-zoster
Venezuela
vernix
vertical transmission
viridans streptococci
viruses
distinction between bacteria and
epidemics
hosts
latent
pathogens
see also specific viruses
vitamin B
12
vitamin D deficiency
vitamin K
vomiting
Warren, Robin
Washington, George
water
antibiotics in
contamination
West Virginia
wheat allergy
whooping cough
wolves
World Health Organization (WHO)
World War I
World War II
Yale
yaws
yeast infections
Yellowstone National Park
Yersinia
Yukon permafrost
Zaire
Z-pak
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Writing, as with science, often takes a village, especially when the author, like me, has a different day job. I am much indebted to my daughter Simone Blaser for helping me shape my early ideas into a form that could be attractive to a publisher, and to Dorian Karchmar, my agent (and Simone’s boss at William Morris), who helped me get there. Sandra Blakeslee did yeoman work converting my ideas and prose, generated by an academic, into a manuscript that could be more widely understood. To Sandra, with her endless creativity, intellect, and energy, and who I now count as one of the most important teachers in my career, I will be forever grateful. Gillian Blake, editor in chief at Henry Holt, and an enthusiast about this work from the very start, contributed in too many ways to count, and I learned that with regard to both style and content she was always right.
Many of my colleagues read portions of the manuscript to help determine whether or not I was on track and accurate. I appreciate the efforts of Drs. William Ledger, Ernst Kuipers, Claudia Plottel, and José Clemente, and the important suggestions of Erika Goldman. Dr. Robert Anderson read the work as both physician and reader, and he gave great advice. I am indebted to Dr. Jan Vilcek for his critical insights as well; although English is not his native language, Jan also corrected my grammar. Linda Peters and Isabel Teitler helped me understand what could be understood and was interesting. I appreciate the friendship they each shared, helping me to craft this manuscript. My assistants at New York University, Sandra Fiorelli, Jessica Stangel, and then Joyce Ying, helped make order from chaos, no small feat, and I am most appreciative of their efforts. Adriana Pericchi Dominguez was an assiduous and resourceful fact-checker.
An important segment of the book focuses on the research done in my lab at Vanderbilt University and, over the past fourteen years, at NYU. At Vanderbilt, Drs. Tim Cover, Murali Tummuru, Guillermo Pérez-Pérez, Richard Peek, John Atherton, and Ernst Kuipers played key roles. At NYU, it also was very much a team effort, involving other faculty members, graduate and medical students, college and high school students, and visiting researchers. So many were involved in substantive ways that it would difficult to name them all. But for the work highlighted in the text, Drs. Guillermo Pérez-Pérez, Zhiheng Pei, Fritz Francois, Joan Reibman, Yu Chen, Zhan Gao, Ilseung Cho, Claudia Plottel, Alex Alekseyenko, Leo Trasande, and Jan Blustein—all fellow NYU faculty members—contributed in ways mentioned and not. I have had outstanding graduate students and postdoctoral fellows who worked with me on the experiments discussed, notably Laurie Cox, Shingo Yamanishi, Alexandra Livanos, Sabine Kienesberger, and Victoria Ruiz. Yael Noble worked as a research assistant before her time in medical school, but in her efforts she was more like a grad student. Many other students, postdocs, and colleagues are working on ongoing projects that one day will be described in great detail in original scientific publications. Together we have had and continue to have an amazing lab, with a great culture of sharing and generosity.
Hurricane Sandy hit us very hard. With a loss of electrical power, we had a mad dash to retrieve our thawing specimens in freezers—the work of thirty years of research. We rescued nearly all of the current studies, but lost some of our archives—samples obtained from villages and patients all over the world decades ago. They were irreplaceable. We were out of our home lab at the New York Veterans Affairs hospital for more than ten months and had one tribulation piled on the next. Yet with their kindness to one another, adaptability, and “can do” mentality, it was, for the lab members, their finest hour, and the storm and its aftermath provided lessons in life that can not be learned from books.
For the past eight years, my research has had major philanthropic support in the form of the Diane Belfer Program in Human Microbial Ecology. Diane was an early believer in the value of our studies. I much appreciate her enthusiasm and unwavering support, beginning when the ideas were more of a dream. Early support also came from the Ellison Medical Foundation. More recently, the Knapp Family Foundation and the Leslie and Daniel Ziff Foundation have been major sponsors of our explorations. Our work also has been supported by the D’Agostino Foundation, Hemmerdinger Foundation, Fritz and Adelaide Kaufman Foundation, Margaret Q. Landenberger Research Foundation, Graham Family Charitable Foundation, James and Patricia Cayne Trust, and Messrs. David Fox, Richard Sharfman, Michael Saperstein, Robert Spass, and Joseph Curcio, and Dr. Bernard Levine, as well as Mss. Regina Skyer, Edythe Heyman, and Lorraine DiPaolo. Donna Marino has been an incredibly effective advocate for our work. I am very grateful to all.
Our work described in this book has been supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Army, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation, the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Ellison Medical Foundation, the International Union against Cancer, the World Health Organization, and governments and universities in Japan, the Netherlands, Korea, United Kingdom, Switzerland, Finland, Sweden, France, Italy, Turkey, and Venezuela for support of visiting scholars. Institutional support came in many different forms from the NYU Langone Medical Center and from the Manhattan/NY Harbor Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
This combination of major research university, U.S. government, private foundations, international support, and philanthropy is necessary for a research program to survive and ultimately to flower.
Finally, my wife and research partner, Dr. Maria Gloria Domínguez Bello, has helped with insight, criticism, adventure, and love. I am glad that I could highlight a few of her many contributions to our shared field. My children Daniel, Genia, and Simone have been steadfast in their love and support.
As with most projects that take a long time, many hands stirred the pot and contributed greatly. I thank one and all for their wonderful help and fellowship.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
M
ARTIN
J. B
LASER
,
MD, has studied the role of bacteria in human disease for more than thirty years. He is the director of the Human Microbiome Program at NYU, served as the chair of medicine at NYU and as the president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, and has had major advisory roles at the National Institutes of Health. He cofounded the
Bellevue Literary Review
and his work has been written about in publications that include
the New Yorker
,
Nature
,
The New York Times
,
The Economist
,
The Washington Post
, and
The Wall Street Journal.
His more than one hundred media appearances include
The Today Show, Good Morning America
, NPR, the BBC,
The O’Reilly Factor,
and CNN. He lives in New York City.