| Literature DB >> 31262067 |
Yvonne Oligschlaeger1, Tulasi Yadati1, Tom Houben1, Claudia Maria Condello Oliván1, Ronit Shiri-Sverdlov2.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic and relapsing intestinal inflammatory condition, hallmarked by a disturbance in the bidirectional interaction between gut and brain. In general, the gut/brain axis involves direct and/or indirect communication via the central and enteric nervous system, host innate immune system, and particularly the gut microbiota. This complex interaction implies that IBD is a complex multifactorial disease. There is increasing evidence that stress adversely affects the gut/microbiota/brain axis by altering intestinal mucosa permeability and cytokine secretion, thereby influencing the relapse risk and disease severity of IBD. Given the recurrent nature, therapeutic strategies particularly aim at achieving and maintaining remission of the disease. Alternatively, these strategies focus on preventing permanent bowel damage and concomitant long-term complications. In this review, we discuss the gut/microbiota/brain interplay with respect to chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract and particularly shed light on the role of stress. Hence, we evaluated the therapeutic impact of stress management in IBD.Entities:
Keywords: IBD; brain; gastrointestinal tract; interplay; microbiota; stress
Year: 2019 PMID: 31262067 PMCID: PMC6678997 DOI: 10.3390/cells8070659
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1The gut/microbiota/brain interplay and its interactions upon exposure to stress. Under conditions of psychological stress including lack of sleep and physical inactivity, the brain (HPA axis) stimulates the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. This can result in increased intestinal permeability and altered gut microbiota. In addition, fat- and sugar-enriched foods, long-term usage of medicines, as well as genetic predisposition can directly affect the gut microbiota composition, and subsequently, intestinal permeability. Furthermore, personal habits, such as hygiene and smoking, can also have an impact on the gut microbiome. Altogether, the multitude of stress-related factors can perturb the gut/microbiota/brain interplay, which contributes to the development of IBD. Relevantly, several stress management techniques have been proven to greatly alleviate IBD symptoms and improve the quality of life of IBD patients. Given that the exact underlying mechanisms in the context of IBD are not yet fully understood, therapeutic options aimed at improving stress management deserve further investigation.
Factors involved in the gut/microbiota/brain interplay in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) development.
| Factor | Type of study | N | Intervention/Methodology | Outcome | Author(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Clinical study | 637 | Questionnaire | First-degree relatives have 10-fold increased risk of IBD development | Orholm, M. et al. | 37 |
| Meta-analysis | >75,000 cases & controls | GWAS | Identified 30 gene loci for CD and 23 for UC | Jostins, L. et al. | 39 | |
| Trans-ancestry association studies | 238,401 | GWAS | Identified 38 susceptibility loci for IBD | Liu, J.Z. et al. | 40 | |
| Genetic association study | 6228 | Association studies | Identified UPS and CYLD gene are important in IBD pathogenesis | Cleynen, I. et al. | 41 | |
| Genotype association study | 34,819 | Association studies | Insights into genetic heterogeneity between ileal and colonic CD | Cleynen, I. et al. | 42 | |
| Clinical study | 323 | Array-based transcriptome data | Identified 99 strong positional candidate genes in 63 risk loci | Momozawa, Y. et al. | 43 | |
| Clinical study | 189 twin pairs | Questionnaire | Results highlight the importance of environmental triggers | Spehlmann, ME. et al. | 45 | |
| Clinical study | 80 twin pairs | Questionnaire | Genetic influence is stronger in CD than in UC | Halfvarson, J. et al. | 46 | |
|
| Interventional, open-label, pilot study | 16 | Vitamin D3 supplementation | Vitamin D3 modulates the gut microbiome | Bashir, M. et al. | 48 |
| In-vivo mouse study | 4–8 mice per group | Oral antibiotics | Increased levels of intracellular zinc led to bacterial clearance | Lahiri, A. et al. | 49 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 4–5 mice per group | High-fat diet and oral antibiotics | High-fat diet alters gut microbiome composition | Hildebrandt, MA. | 55 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | >100 inbred mouse strains | High-fat/high-sucrose diet | High-fat/high-sucrose diet influences gut microbiota composition | Parks, BW. et al. | 56 | |
| Case-control study | 86 | Dietary intake | Mono- and polyunsaturated fats consumption is a risk factor for IBD | Geerling, BJ. et al. | 57 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 4–5 mice per group | Diet enriched with phytosterols | Phytosterols are protective against IBD | Aldini, R. et al. | 58 | |
|
| Population-based case-control study | 1382 | Questionnaire on 25 different topics | Altered intestinal microbiota may modulate risk of IBD | Ng, SC. et al. | 62 |
| Retrospective case study | 1194 | Clinical history and questionnaire | Higher prevalence of CD in urban areas and UC in inland areas | Carpio, D. et al. | 68 | |
|
| Meta-analysis | 245 articles | Smoking | Smoking is a risk factor for IBD | Mahid, SS. et al. | 51 |
| Prospective case-control study | 160 | Transdermal nicotine or placebo patches | Smoking effects gut microbiota composition | Richardson, CE. et al. | 52 | |
|
| Meta-analysis | 11 observational studies | Antibiotic exposure | Antibiotics increases the risk of new-onset CD than UC | Ungaro, R. et al. | 70 |
| Meta-analysis | 20 studies | OCP | Increased risk for development of CD and UC | Ortizo, R. et al. | 71 | |
| Case-control study | 122 | NSAIDs | Provoked disease activity in IBD | Felder, JB. et al. | 72 | |
|
| In-vivo mouse study | 4 mice per group | Exercise training | Alleviated symptoms of acute colitis | Saxena, A. et al. | 60 |
| Prospective cohort study | 194,711 | Physical activity | Inversely associated with risk of CD | Khalili, H. | 61 | |
| Uncontrolled pilot study | 12 | 12-week walking program | Beneficial for IBD patients | Loudon, CP. et al. | 63 | |
|
| Longitudinal,internet-based cohort data | 3173 | Questionnaire | Increased risk of disease flares in CD but not UC | Ananthakrishnan, AN. et al. | 75 |
| Clinical study | 10 | Disturbances in sleep-wake cycle | Sleep disturbances led to immunologic alterations | Born, J. et al. | 76 | |
| Clinical study | 47 | Questionnaire assessing sleep quality | Impaired sleep quality is associated with pediatric IBD | Mahlmann, L. et al. | 77 | |
| Clinical study | 32 | Questionnaire assessing sleep quality | Impaired quality of life in IBD | Keefer, L. et al. | 78 | |
| Prospective observational cohort study | 41 | Pittsburgh sleep quality index (PSQI) | Strong association between poor sleep quality and IBD | Ali, T. et al. | 79 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 33 | Diet and sleep disturbances | Circadian disorganization impacts intestinal microbiota | Voigt, RM. et al. | 80 |
CD = Crohn’s disease; GWAS = genome-wide association studies; NSAIDs = nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; OCP = oral contraceptive pill; SNP = single nucleotide polymorphism; UC = ulcerative colitis; UPS = ubiquitin protease system.
Studies investigating the link between stress and gut microbiota.
| Factor | Type of Study | N | Intervention/Methodology | Outcome | Author(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| In-vivo mouse study | 6–20 mice per group | Maternal high-fat diet | Dysbiosis and low-grade inflammation in the intestine | Xie, R. et al. | 83 |
| In-vivo rat study | 6–10 per group | Prenatal stress | Long-lasting alterations in the intestinal microbiota composition | Golubeva, AV. et al. | 84 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 21–23 mice per group | Prenatal stress | Alterations in vaginal microbiota contributed to reprogramming of the developing brain | Jasarevic, E. et al. | 85 | |
| In vivo primates study | 20 | Maternal separation | Maternal separation-induced psychological disturbances altered intestinal microflora | Bailey, MT. et al. | 91 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 22 | Maternal separation | Early life stress induced alterations in gut-brain axis contributing to IBD symptoms | O’Mahony, SM. et al. | 92 | |
| Longitudinal clinical study | 192 children | Questionnaire | Prenatal stress is associated with microbial colonization patterns in infants | Zijlmans, MA. et al. | 104 | |
|
| In-vivo mouse study | 7–20 mice per group | Chronic social defeat | Stress induced complex structural changes in the gut microbiota | Bharwani, A. et al. | 81 |
| In-vivo mouse study | 10 mice per group | Lactation | Cellular transfer of bacterial translocation occurred in pregnant and lactating mice | Donnet-Hughes, A. et al. | 87 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 5 mice per group | SDR | Stress led to significant changes in intestinal microbiota colonization | Bailey, MT. et al. | 88 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 10–12 (3 independent experiments) | Unpredictable chronic mild stress | Altered intestinal microbiota composition, specifically the | Marin, IA. et al. | 89 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 5 mice per group | SDR | Affected microbial populations that are closely associated with the colonic mucosa | Galley, JD. et al. | 90 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 4–6 mice per group | Chronic restraint stress | Disturbed gut microbiota and subsequent activation of immune system led to colitis | Gao, X. et al. | 93 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 7–8 rats per group | WAS | Intestinal inflammation by impaired mucosal defenses against luminal bacteria | Soderholm, JD. et al. | 94 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 6 | Cold-restraint stress or WAS | Exacerbated intestinal inflammation due to increased uptake of immunogenic substances | Saunders, PR. et al. | 95 | |
| In-vivo rat study |
| Stress induction | Increased gastrointestinal permeability, allowing luminal constituents to the mucosal immune system | Meddings, JB. et al. | 96 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 4 rats per group | WAS | Stress-induced epithelial mitochondrial damage and mucosal mast cell activation | Santos, J. et al. | 97 | |
| Field experiment in wild birds | 64 | Corticosterone-implant | Altered gut microbiome in free-living birds | Noguera, JC. et al. | 101 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 13–14 rats per group | WAS | Altered intestinal mucus composition | Da Silva, S et al. | 102 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 18–24 mice per group | Germ-free and specific-pathogen free; acute restraint stress | Commensal microbiota can affect the postnatal development of the HPA stress response | Sudo, N. et al. | 108 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 12 mice per group | Germ-free and specific-pathogen free | Conventional intestinal microbiota influenced the development of behavior | Neufeld, KM. et al. | 109 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 7–14 mice per group | Germ-free and specific-pathogen free | Gut microbiota affected mammalian brain development and subsequent adult behavior | Diaz Heijtz, R. et al. | 110 | |
| Clinical study | 263 | Daily interview assessment | Stress is associated with digestive problems and gastrointestinal health | Walker, LS. et al. | 103 | |
| Clinical study | 40 | Depression | Increased bacterial translocation and activated immune responses against commensal bacteria | Maes, M. et al. | 105 | |
| Clinical study | 65 | Coping style instrument | IBD adolescents used more avoidant coping styles compared to healthy controls | Van der Zaag-Loonen, HJ. et al. | 106 | |
|
| In-vivo rat study | 4–5 rats per group | WAS and probiotics | Probiotics prevented chronic stress-induced intestinal abnormalities | Zareie, M. et al. | 99 |
| In-vivo rat study | 84 | Maternal separationand prebiotics/probiotics/LC-PUFA | Nutritional intervention at weaning normalized gut permeability and restored growth rate | Garcia-Rodenas, CL. et al. | 100 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 36 | Probiotic formulation | Suggested the importance of probiotics in gut/brain axis in stress-related disorders | Bravo, JA. et al. | 111 | |
| In-vivo mouse study | 8 mice per group | Chronic mild stress and probiotics | Decreased pro-inflammatory cytokines and altered stress-related behaviors | Li, N. et al. | 113 | |
| In-vivo rat study | 36 rats; | Probiotic formulation | Anxiolytic-like activity in rats | Messaoudi, M. et al. | 112 | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized parallel group study | 66 individuals | Probiotic formulation | Beneficial psychological effects in healthy human volunteers | Messaoudi, M. et al. | 112 | |
| Systematic review | 11 RCTs | Prebiotic supplementation | Short-term beneficial effects in intestinal microbiota composition | Rao, S. et al. | 114 |
HPA = hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis; LC-PUFA = long-chain poly-unsaturated fatty acids; RCT = randomized controlled trials; SDR = social disruption; WAS = water-avoidance stress.
Clinical studies investigating stress management in IBD.
| Factor | Type of Study | N | Intervention | Outcome in IBD Patients | Author(s) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Pilot RCT | 28 | Guided imagery with relaxation (GIR) | Improved QL in elderly women with osteoarthritis | Baird, CL. et al. | 150 |
| Prospective RCT | 39 | Relaxation-training | Beneficial effects on anxiety, pain and stress in IBD patients | Mizrahi, MC. et al. | 163 | |
|
| Clinical study | 45 | 3 types of stress management, including self-directed and conventional medical treatment | Trained CD patients showed reduced fatigue, constipation and abdominal pain, whereas no beneficial effects in conventional-treated CD patients | García-Vega, E. et al. | 151 |
|
| Clinical study | 60 | 60-h training program in lifestyle modification over a period of 10 weeks | Short-term benefits in the QL in UC patients, whereas no long-term effects | Langhorst, J. et al. | 157 |
| Clinical study | 49 | 8-session information about QL and stress management | No effect on anxiety levels 6 months post-intervention | Larsson, K. et al. | 160 | |
| Prospective, randomized waiting-control group design | 30 | 60-h training program on life style management | Improved QL in patients with UC remission | Elsenbruch, S. et al. | 167 | |
| Prospective, randomized study | 32 | Low-intensity walking program | Improved QL of CD patients | Ng, V. et al. | 179 | |
| Prospective RCT | 30 | Moderate-intensity running | Improved QL of IBD patients | Klare, P. et al. | 180 | |
|
| Two clinical trials | 36 | 7-session behavioral protocol | 57% reduction in IBD relapse in the following 12 months | Keefer, L. et al. | 152 |
| RCT | 41 | Primary and Secondary Control Enhancement Therapy-Physical Illness | Beneficial effects on depression in IBD adolescents | Szigethy, E. et al. | 158 | |
| Clinical study | 178 | Nurse-led counselling | Improved QL over 6 rather than 12 months in IBD patients | Smith, GD. et al. | 161 | |
| Prospective, uncontrolled open trial | 30 | Supportive-expressive group psychotherapy | No changes in QL, anxiety, or depression over the course of treatment in UC/CD | Maunder, RG. et al. | 162 | |
| Meta-analysis | 1824 studies with 14 RCTs | Psychological therapy | Small short-term beneficial effects on QL and depression in IBD patients | Gracie, DJ. et al. | 166 | |
| RCT | 29 | Breath-Body-Mind Workshop; questionnaire | Significant long-lasting benefits for IBD symptoms, anxiety, depression and QL | Gerbarg, PL. et al. | 155 | |
| Control study | 60 | Mindfulness-based stress reduction | Improved mood and QL after six months of intervention | Neilson, K. et al. | 156 | |
| RCT | 36 | Gut-directed hypnotherapy | Gut-directed hypnotherapy may be one aspect in a disease-management program for IBD | Keefer, L. et al. | 159 | |
| Clinical trial | 66 | Multi-convergent therapy (psychotherapy) | Therapy is beneficial in the management of IBD symptoms | Berrill, JW. et al. | 164 | |
|
| Retrospective observational study | 30 | Herbal treatment | Positive effect of cannabis on disease activity in CD | Naftali, T. et al. | 171 |
| Prospective, placebo-controlled study | 21 | Herbal treatment | Short course of cannabis had beneficial effects in CD patients | Naftali, T. et al. | 172 | |
| Double-blind RCT | 108 | Placebo or vitamin D3 | Reduced relapse risk in CD | Jorgensen, SP. et al. | 174 | |
| Prospective | 37 | Active or plain vitamin D | Active form of vitamin D has short-term beneficial effects in CD | Miheller, P. et al. | 175 | |
| Meta-analysis | 12 studies | Serum folate and vitamin B12 | Low concentration of serum folate is a risk factor for IBD and supplementation may be beneficial | Pan, Y. et al. | 177 | |
| Double-blind RCT | 10 per group | Placebo/ phylloquinone/ vitamin D3 | No significant beneficial effects of phylloquinone on bone health in CD patients | O’Connor EM. et al. | 178 |
CD = Crohn’s disease; QL = quality of life; RCT = randomised controlled trial; UC = ulcerative colitis.