RT Journal Article T1 Editorial: Risk of Dietary Hazardous Substances and Impact on Human Microbiota: Possible Role in Several Dysbiosis Phenotypes. A1 Aguilera, Margarita A1 Lamas, Bruno A1 Van Pamel, Els A1 Bhide, Mangesh A1 Houdeau, Eric A1 Rivas, Ana K1 dysbiosis K1 endocrine disruptors K1 microbiota K1 probiotics K1 xenobiotics AB The cumulative dietary exposure to hazardous substances such as endocrine disruptor chemicals (EDC) that are present in common and processed food is continuously increasing (Gálvez-Ontiveros et al., 2021). Prolonged exposure to EDC seems to affect human health by triggering obesity, insulin resistance, metabolic syndrome, and even infertility (Baker et al., 2017). Unfortunately, there is still a lack of knowledge on specific biomarkers necessary to better understand the mechanisms associated to specific EDC-related pathogenesis. The impact of EDC has been traditionally investigated through biomonitoring and epidemiological studies. However, analytical determinations of EDC in biological samples failed to provide consistent results. PB Frontiers Research Foundation SN 1664-302X YR 2021 FD 2021-03-09 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/17772 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/17772 LA en NO Aguilera M, Lamas B, Van Pamel E, Bhide M, Houdeau E, Rivas A. Editorial: Risk of Dietary Hazardous Substances and Impact on Human Microbiota: Possible Role in Several Dysbiosis Phenotypes. Front Microbiol. 2021 Apr 23;12:669480. DS RISalud RD Apr 9, 2025