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. 2019 Mar 18;44:618–638. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.03.029

Table 1.

Body and organ weights.

VEH (n = 10) ABX (n = 9) VEH-FMT (n = 10) ABX-FMT (n = 10) One-way ANOVA VEH vs ABX VEH-FMT vs ABX-FMT VEH vs VEH-FMT ABX vs ABX-FMT VEH vs ABX-FMT ABX vs VEH-FMT
Body mass
(g)
380 ± 23 369 ± 22 436 ± 27 420 ± 24 <0.0001 0.999 0.888 0.0001 0.0002 0.004 0.0001
RV
(mg/100 g)
58 ± 6 51 ± 3 55 ± 7 61 ± 6 0.009 0.133 0.196 0.999 0.008 0.999 0.999
LV
(mg/100 g)
219 ± 14 207 ± 10 206 ± 14 208 ± 9 0.053
LV + RV
(mg/100 g)
277 ± 16 258 ± 10 260 ± 14 269 ± 11 0.011 0.018 0.982 0.043 0.483 0.967 0.999
Lung dry weight
(mg/100 g)
100 ± 12 90 ± 11 98 ± 9 85 ± 10 0.01 0.217 0.067 0.999 0.999 0.015 0.723
Lung wet weight
(mg/100 g)
495 ± 104 404 ± 44 427 ± 43 406 ± 83 0.03 0.064 0.999 0.288 0.999 0.061 0.999
Oedema index
(% wet weight)
79 ± 3 78 ± 1 77 ± 1 79 ± 3 0.017 0.999 0.196 0.112 0.999 0.999 0.016

BW, body weight; RV, right ventricle; LV, left ventricle; VEH, autoclaved deionised water; ABX, antibiotic-treated; VEH-FMT, VEH followed by faecal microbiota transfer; ABX-FMT, antibiotic-treated followed by faecal microbiota transfer. Data are shown as mean ± SD and were statistically compared using one-way ANOVA with Bonferroni post hoc where appropriate, or non-parametric Kruskal-Wallis test with Dunn's post hoc, where appropriate. Each p-value is adjusted to account for multiple comparisons. p-values shown in bold highlight significant differences.