Medizinische Universität Graz - Research portal
Selected Publication:
SHR
Neuro
Cancer
Cardio
Lipid
Metab
Microb
Blesl, A; Binder, L; Halwachs, B; Baumann-Durchschein, F; Fürst, S; Constantini-Kump, P; Wenzl, H; Gorkiewicz, G; Högenauer, C.
The Fecal Microbiome of IBD Patients Is Less Divertible by Bowel Preparation Compared to Healthy Controls: Results From a Prospective Study.
Inflamm Bowel Dis. 2025;
Doi: 10.1093/ibd/izaf053
Web of Science
PubMed
FullText
FullText_MUG
- Leading authors Med Uni Graz
-
Blesl Andreas
- Co-authors Med Uni Graz
-
Baumann-Durchschein Franziska
-
Binder Lukas
-
Constantini-Kump Patrizia
-
Fürst Stefan
-
Gorkiewicz Gregor
-
Halwachs-Wenzl Bettina
-
Hoegenauer Christoph
-
Wenzl Heimo
- Altmetrics:
- Dimensions Citations:
- Plum Analytics:
- Scite (citation analytics):
- Abstract:
- BACKGROUND: The fecal microbiome of patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) is characterized by longitudinal variability. It remains unknown if this is caused by decreased resilience of the microbiome to external factors. We investigated the influence of osmotic diarrhea induced by bowel preparation as a disruptive factor on the fecal microbiome in IBD patients and healthy comparators. METHODS: We conducted a prospective, single-center study including IBD patients and healthy controls scheduled for colonoscopy with uniform bowel preparation. Fecal samples were collected at 7 time points prior, during, and until 3 months after the intervention. 16S rRNA was isolated from stool and sequenced using the Illumina technique. RESULTS: Twenty-two IBD patients and 17 healthy controls were included in the study. Baseline diversity was higher in healthy controls. Bowel preparation longitudinally decreased alpha diversity and altered beta diversity and taxonomic composition in both groups. Alterations were more pronounced in healthy controls, and the microbial composition converged between the 2 groups. Bowel preparation resulted in an increased relative abundance of Anaerostipes and Coprococcus in both groups and in decreased relative abundance of Bifidobacterium and Clostridium sensu stricto in IBD patients and of Eubacterium hallii group and Ruminococcus in healthy controls. Changes largely restored to baseline composition within 1 week in both groups and remained stable thereafter. CONCLUSIONS: Bowel preparation induced reversible short-term microbial perturbations which were less pronounced in IBD patients than in healthy comparators suggesting that a single external disruptive factor may have less impact on an already altered fecal microbiome.
- Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
-
inflammatory bowel disease
-
microbiome
-
bowel preparation
-
ulcerative colitis
-
Crohn's disease