| Literature DB >> 21401922 |
Abstract
'Gut health' is a term increasingly used in the medical literature and by the food industry. It covers multiple positive aspects of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, such as the effective digestion and absorption of food, the absence of GI illness, normal and stable intestinal microbiota, effective immune status and a state of well-being. From a scientific point of view, however, it is still extremely unclear exactly what gut health is, how it can be defined and how it can be measured. The GI barrier adjacent to the GI microbiota appears to be the key to understanding the complex mechanisms that maintain gut health. Any impairment of the GI barrier can increase the risk of developing infectious, inflammatory and functional GI diseases, as well as extraintestinal diseases such as immune-mediated and metabolic disorders. Less clear, however, is whether GI discomfort in general can also be related to GI barrier functions. In any case, methods of assessing, improving and maintaining gut health-related GI functions are of major interest in preventive medicine.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21401922 PMCID: PMC3065426 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-9-24
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Gut health and gastrointestinal healtha
| Five major criteria for a healthy GI system | Specific signs of GI health |
|---|---|
| Effective digestion and absorption of food | Normal nutritional status and effective absorption of food, water and minerals |
| Absence of GI illness | No acid peptic disease, gastroesophageal reflux disease or other gastric inflammatory disease |
| Normal and stable intestinal microbiota | No bacterial overgrowth |
| Effective immune status | Effective GI barrier function, normal mucus production and no enhanced bacterial translocation |
| Status of well-being | Normal quality of life |
aGI, gastrointestinal; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; IgA, immunoglobulin A.
Figure 1The intestine's impact on health. The gastrointestinal tract contributes to health by ensuring digestion and absorption of nutrients, minerals and fluids; by induction of mucosal and systemic tolerance; by defence of the host against infectious and other pathogens; and by signalling from the periphery to the brain. For details and references, see text 'Underlying mechanisms'.
Figure 2Mechanisms of action of the intestinal microbiome on the gastrointestinal barrier. Commensal bacteria support the digestion of fibres and other nutrients, thereby contributing to energy and substrate supply. They regulate epithelial functions such as mucus production in goblet cells, defensin release from Paneth cells and tight junction protein synthesis in normal epithelial cells. They prevent colonisation of pathogens in the gut and regulate the mucosal immune system, for example, by inducing and maintaining gut-associated lymphoid tissue and by stimulating mucosal immunoglobulin A production. For details and references, see text 'Underlying mechanisms'.
Diseases thought to be associated with GI barrier and GI microbiotaa
| Location | Diseases for which the GI barrier plays a central role in pathogenesis | Diseases associated with an altered composition or function of the GI microbiota |
|---|---|---|
| Intestinal | Infectious diarrhoea [ | Inflammatory bowel disease [ |
| Extraintestinal | Allergic diseases [ | Allergic diseases [ |
aGI, gastrointestinal; ICU, intensive care unit.
Assessment of normal gut functiona
| Assessments and parameters | Descriptions | |
|---|---|---|
| Subjective assessments of well-being | ||
| Validated questionnaires useful to assess quality of life and gut health | IBS-Quality of Life (IBS-QOL) | Validated for assessment of quality of life specific to IBS: 34 questions |
| Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire (IBDQ) | Validated for assessment of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in adult patients with IBD | |
| Bowel Disease Questionnaire (BDQ) | Validated to distinguish patients with functional and organic GI disease | |
| Health Status Questionnaire (HSQ-12) | Validated for assessment of HRQoL in the general population | |
| Short Form Health Survey SF-12 (SF-12) | Validated for assessment of HRQoL in the general population | |
| GI symptom scores | IBS Severity Scoring System (IBS-SSS) | Validated for scoring lower GI symptoms on the basis of nine questions; range of 0 to 500 points |
| Short Form Leeds Dyspepsia Questionnaire (SF-LDQ) | Validated instrument for measuring the presence and severity of dyspepsia | |
| Gastrointestinal Symptom (GIS) profile | Validated for assessment of symptoms of functional dyspepsia; 10 questions | |
| Subject's Global Assessment of Relief (SGA) | Validated assessment of the impact of treatment on IBS-related symptoms; 1 question | |
| IBS Global Assessment of Improvement (IBS-GAI) ("adequate relief") | Asks participants if, compared to the way they felt before entering the study, their IBS symptoms have changed over the past 7 days; 1 question | |
| Functional Bowel Disorder Severity Index (FBDSI) | Validated score for assessment of patient perception of abdominal pain in IBS | |
| Numeric Rating Scale (NRS) for assessment of pain | Validated in IBS patients | |
| Visceral Sensitivity Index (VSI) | Validated psychometric instrument that measures GI symptom-specific anxiety | |
| Bristol Stool Scale/Bristol Stool Chart | A medical aid designed to classify the form of human faeces into seven categories | |
| Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale | ||
| Eating habits | Food frequency questionnaire | 7-day diet history assessed using computer software |
| Objective parameters | ||
| Markers of functionality | Gastric function | pH metry in the esophagus [ |
| Permeability measurements | Tracer molecules (lactulose/mannitol, 51Cr-EDTA, PEG); | |
| Motility tests | Barostat, gastric scintigraphy, 13C urea breath test (gastric emptying) and lactulose hydrogen breath test (normal range: 40 to 240 hours) | |
| Transit time | Radiopaque pellets (Hinton test) and isotope-labelled test meal (normal range: 24 to 168 hours) | |
| Digestion parameters | Stool elastase (> 200/g) and stool fat (< 7 g/d), carbohydrate breath tests, anthropometry and micronutrient analysis | |
| Markers of intestinal integrity | Epithelial integrity | Histology (villus height/crypt depth ratio, mitosis and apoptosis), mucus secretion (mucins and trefoil peptides) and Ussing chamber (ion fluxes and electric potentials) |
| Specific molecules | E-cadherin, growth factors, tight junction molecules, α1-antitrypsin in faeces and LPS in blood | |
| Antimicrobial peptides | α- and β-defensins, calprotectin, lysozyme or neutrophil-derived elastase in faeces | |
| Marker of intact immunity | Cell counts and phenotyping | Differential blood count and FACS analysis, histopathology of intestinal biopsies and immunohistochemistry of intestinal biopsies |
| Cell mediators and cytokines | Inflammatory cytokines (IL-1, IL-6 and TNFα), anti-inflammatory cytokines (IL-10 and TGFβ), regulatory cytokines (IL-2, sIL-2R, IL-4, IL-5 and so on), proteases (tryptase, chymases, chymotrypsin and so on), immunoglobulins (IgA, sIgA and IgE) and others (retinoic acid, neuropeptides and so on) | |
| Functional assays | Cell cultures and cocultures, DTH response, phagocytosis, chemotaxis, oxidative burst (superoxide anion generation) and NK cell activity | |
| Analysis of the intestinal microbiome | Classical approaches | Bacterial culture and toxin measurements |
| New approaches | Metagenomics (PCR and full bacterial sequencing), metabonomics (metabolic capacity of the microbiome) | |
aIBS, irritable bowel syndrome; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; GI, gastrointestinal; 51CR-EDTA, chromium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid; PEG, polyethylene glycol; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; FACS, fluorescence-activated cell sorting; IL, interleukin; TNF, tumour necrosis factor; TGF, transforming growth factor; sIL-2R, soluble interleukin 2 receptor; Ig, immunoglobulin; sIgA, secretory immunoglobulin A; DTH, delayed-type hypersensitivity; NK, natural killer; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.