| Literature DB >> 23610585 |
Abbas Ali Imani Fooladi1, Hamideh Mahmoodzadeh Hosseini, Mohammad Reza Nourani, Soghra Khani, Seyed Moayed Alavian.
Abstract
CONTEXT: A symbiotic relationship between the liver and intestinal tract enables the healthy status of both organs. Microflora resident in intestinal lumen plays a significant role in hepatocytes function. Alterations to the type and amount of microorganisms that live in the intestinal tract can result in serious and harmful liver dysfunctions such as cirrhosis, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, alcoholic liver disease, and hepatic encephalopathy. An increased number of pathogens, especially enterobacteriaceae, enterococci, and streptococci species causes the elevation of intestinal permeability and bacterial translocation. The presence of high levels of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and bacterial substances in the blood result in a portal hypertension and ensuing hepatocytes damage. Several methods including the usage of antibiotics, prebiotics, and probiotics can be used to prevent the overgrowth of pathogens. Compared to prebiotic and antibiotic therapy, probiotics strains are a safer and less expensive therapy. Probiotics are "live microorganisms (according to the FAO/WHO) which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the host". EVIDENCE ACQUISITIONS: Data from numerous preclinical and clinical trials allows for control of the flora bacteria quantity, decreases in compounds derived from bacteria, and lowers proinflammatory production such as TNF-α, IL-6 and IFN-γ via down-regulation of the nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κ B).Entities:
Keywords: Carcinoma, Hepatocellular; Hepatic Encephalopathy; Hepatitis; Liver Cirrhosis, Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease; Liver Diseases, Alcoholic; Probiotics
Year: 2013 PMID: 23610585 PMCID: PMC3631524 DOI: 10.5812/hepatmon.7521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hepat Mon ISSN: 1735-143X Impact factor: 0.660
Figure 1a) Schematic Illustration of Multifarious Mechanisms Involved in Liver Diseases and b) Probiotic Influences on Them
A list of Multifarious Studies on NAFLD
| Studies | Participants/Duration | Treatment | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ob/ob mice fed HFD / 4 w | VSL # 3 | hepatic FA content, ALT level, activity of Jun N-terminal kinase, NF-κB and fatty acid β-oxidation, improved hepatic IR, and NAFLD histology | ( | |
| mice fed HFD / 4 w | VSL # 3 | Ameliorate hepatic NK cell depletion, steatosis, IR and inflammation, cholesterol and TG in the liver and plasma | ( | |
| mice fed HFD / 8 w | liver steatosis, improved histological steatosis manifestation | ( | ||
| Rats fed HFD & HCD / 6 w | LDL, cholesterol and triglycerides | ( | ||
| Rats fed high-fructose diet / 8 w | oxidative stress and ameliorate IR in liver | ( | ||
| Rats fed HCD / 5w | cholesterol and triglycerides | ( | ||
| Rats fed HFD / 4w | VSL # 3 | Improved the hepatic inflammatory, steatotic, peroxidative factors, serum aminotransferase levels | ( | |
| mice fed MCD / 9 w | VSL # 3 | only improved liver fibrosis without effect on statosis and inflammation | ( | |
| Rats/8 w | hepatic inflammation, steatosis and fibrosis, innate inflammatory cytokines | ( | ||
| 10 NASH patients / 2 m | improved liver damage and liver function test ALT, AST, and GGT activity Ameliorate MDA and 4-HN plasma level | ( | ||
| 22 patients / 3 m | VSL # 3 | improved liver damage and liver function test ALT, AST, and GGT activity Ameliorate MDA, and 4-HN plasma level | ( | |
| 4 patients / 4 m | VSL # 3 | liver fat After washout time, no effects in blood or clinical parameters | ( | |
| 28 patients / 3 m | ALT, AST, and GGT activity | ( |
Abbreviation: ALT, alanin aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; DB, double-blind; d, day; FOS, fructo-oligosaccharide.synbiotic; GGT, gamma glutamyl transferase, m, month; HCD, high-cholesterol diet; HFD, high fat diet; MDA, malondialdehyde; 4-HN, 4-hydroxynonenal; OL, open labeled; PC, placebo-controlled; R, randomized; w, week.
Studies on Animal and Human Subjects with ALD
| Study models | Participants/Duration | Treatment | Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat fed ethanol / 1 m | Any hepatic pathologic alterations in induced by alcohol, endotoxin level | ( | ||
| Rat fed ethanol / 10 w | Gut permeability, decreased hepatic and intestinal oxidative stress and inflammation | ( | ||
| Rat fed ethanol / 10 w | Preventing alcohol-induced dysbiosis | ( | ||
| Mice fed ethanol / 35 d | heat-killed | ALT, AST, TG, and cholesterol level Inhibit overexpression of TNF-a, SREBP-1, SREBP-2 | ( | |
| 39 patients / 42 d | Improving intestinal colonization, and restore physiological Microflora in faces, blood endotoxin level, Child-Pugh score. | ( | ||
| 12 patients / 4 w | Restore neutrophil function, Ex vivo endotoxin-stimulated levels of sTNFR1, sTNFR2 and IL10 normalized TLR4 expression | ( | ||
| 66 patients / 5 d | Bifidobacteriaand Lactobacilli, ALT, AST , LDH and total bilirubin | ( | ||
| 20 patients / 3 m | VSL#3 | Improving MDA, 4-HN, ALT, AST, GGT, TNF-a, IL-6, and IL-10 levels | ( |
Abbreviation: ALT, alanin aminotransferase; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; DB, double-blind; d, day; GGT, gamma glutamyl transferase; MDA, malondialdehyde; 4-HN, 4-hydroxynonenal; m, month; OL, open labeled; PC, placebo-controlled; RCT, randomized clinical trial; SREBP-1, Sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1; w, week.
Several Animal and Clinical Trial Studies on Cirrhosis
| Participants/Duration | Treatment | Outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cirrhotic Rat induced by CCl4 / 10 d | Intestinal enterobacteria and enterococci, bacterial translocation, MDA levels | (97) | ||
| Cirrhotic Rat induced by CCl4 / 10 d | No effect on prevention of bacterial translocation | (98) | ||
| Rat with acute liver injury / 8 d | Prevented alcohol-induced dysbiosis | (99) | ||
| 36 patients / 6 m | The ammonia levels starting after 1 m/ no effect on liver enzyme | (93, 100) | ||
| 65 patients / 6 m | Incidence of HE, hospital admission, plasma-ammonia level, serum bilirubin level | (101) | ||
| 50 patients / 14 d | Bifidobacteriumcount, fecal pH, fecal and blood ammonia in both groups, endotoxin level only with B. subtilis and E. faecium | (69) | ||
| 8 patients with HVPG ˃10 mmHg / 2 m | VSL # 3 | In plasma endotoxin, serum TNF-α, plasma aldosterone | (102) | |
| 41 chronic liver disease / 14 d | E. coli count, and intestinal flora imbalance, improvement in debilitation, food intake, abdominal distension, and ascitic fluid | (103) | ||
| 39 patients / 48 d | Improve intestinal colonization, endotoxin levels on day 42 | (104) |
Abbreviation: DB, double-blind; d, day; GGT; gamma glutamyl transferase; HE, hepatic encephalopathy; HVPG, hepatic venous pressure gradient; MDA, malondialdehyde; M, month; PC, placebo-controlled; PPT, perspective pilot study; RCT, randomized clinical trial; R, randomized; W, week.
Multifarious Clinical Trials in Patients With Hepatic Encephalopathy
| Participants/Duration | Treatment | Outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 40 patients/three 4 w with 2 weeks washout | Serum ammonia levels, improved various neurocognitive tests | ( | ||
| 50 patients / 30 d | Fermentable fiber or symbiotic 2000 | Fecal content of on-urease-producing | ( | |
| 60 patients | Improving neuropsychological testing, serum ammonia levels | ( | ||
| 90 patients / 3 m | LOLA or lactolus or probiotic | Improving blood ammonia levels | ( | |
| 25 patients / 2 m | Yogurt | Significant rate of MHE reversal | ( |
Abbreviation: DB, double-blind; d, day; m, month; FOS, fructo-oligosaccharide; HE, hepatic encephalopathy; LOLA, L-ornithine L-aspartate; PC, placebo-controlled; RCT, randomized clinical trial; R, randomized; w, week.
Clinical Trials Assessed Probiotics Roles on Postoperative Infections in Liver Transplantation
| Participants/Duration | Treatment | Outcome | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95 recipients | Duration of antibiotic therapy and hospital stay and intensive care unit stay, postoperative bacterial infections incidence | ( | ||
| 66 recipients / 15 d | Postoperative bacterial infections incidence, ↓duration of antibiotic therapy | ( | ||
| 25 children recipients / 2 m | β-glucuronidase,β-glucosidase, and urease, changes in the intestinal microbiota | ( | ||
| 50 recipients / 16 d | Postoperative bacterial infections incidence | ( |
Abbreviation: DB, double-blind; d, day; m, month; PC, placebo-controlled; RCT, randomized clinical trial; R, randomized; w, week.