Journal of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
DOI: 10.58739/jcbs/v16i1. editorial
Year: 2026, Volume: 16, Issue: 1, Pages: 1-3
Editoriall
Usha Kini1, 2, 3, 4*
1Professor of Pathology (Research), St. John's Medical College, Bangalore.
2Emeritus Scientist, ICMR, India.
3Professor of Eminence, SDUAHER, Kolar, Karnataka.
4President, Indian Association of Pathologists & Microbiologists, 2025.
*Corresponding Author
Email: [email protected]
Received Date:28 March 2026, Accepted Date:01 April 2026, Published Date:02 April 2026
Virtually all humans live in close association with surrounding microbes, like all multicellular organisms are inhabited by a vast number of organisms, namely bacteria, archaea, viruses, and unicellular eukaryotes. Especially that group of microorganisms that live in peaceful coexistence with their hosts are specifically grouped as microbiota, microflora, or normal flora. Interestingly, the most heavily colonised group is the Gut microbiomes. When considering such a hidden group of intelligence, one is reminded of Hippocrates, who said “death sits in the bowels” and “bad digestion is the root of all evil” way back in 400 BC. This sector of the human gut microbiome has made tremendous progress, rapidly moving from scientific curiosity to the clinical frontier. However, amid the wave of research projects, their publications, use of probiotics and promises of precision, one truth demands emphasis: we are interpreting an ecosystem much more complex than we are prepared to control. Before we set the target, namely, the gut microbiome and fix it, it is a system to be understood.
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Published By Sri Devaraj Urs Academy of Higher Education, Kolar, Karnataka
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