Description
Correlation analysis or network diagram showing relationships between specific gut bacterial taxa and clinical parameters in pediatric Crohn's disease at the time of diagnosis.
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Figure 1
Microbial diversity comparison between healthy children and treatment-naive pediatric patients with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease. Alpha or beta diversity metrics reveal differences in the intestinal microbiome composition at disease onset.
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Figure 2
Taxonomic composition analysis showing the relative abundance of major bacterial phyla or families in stool samples from pediatric Crohn's disease patients versus healthy controls.
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Figure 3
Principal coordinate analysis or ordination plot illustrating the separation in gut microbial community structure between children with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease and age-matched healthy controls.
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Figure 4
Differential abundance analysis identifying specific bacterial taxa that are significantly enriched or depleted in the intestinal microbiome of treatment-naive pediatric Crohn's disease patients.
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ChartSource Paper
Differences in the intestinal microbiome of healthy children and patients with newly diagnosed Crohn's disease.Cite This Figure
 > Source: Kinga Kowalska-Duplaga et al. "Differences in the intestinal microbiome of healthy children and patients with n." *Scientific reports*, 2019. PMID: [31827191](https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31827191/)
<figure> <img src="https://pdfs.citedhealth.com/figures/31827191/345.png" alt="Correlation analysis or network diagram showing relationships between specific gut bacterial taxa and clinical parameters in pediatric Crohn's disease at the time of diagnosis." /> <figcaption>Figure 5. Correlation analysis or network diagram showing relationships between specific gut bacterial taxa and clinical parameters in pediatric Crohn's disease at the time of diagnosis.<br> Source: Kinga Kowalska-Duplaga et al. "Differences in the intestinal microbiome of healthy children and patients with n." <em>Scientific reports</em>, 2019. PMID: <a href="https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31827191/">31827191</a></figcaption> </figure>