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Peter, J; Fournier, C; Durdevic, M; Knoblich, L; Keip, B; Dejaco, C; Trauner, M; Moser, G.
A Microbial Signature of Psychological Distress in Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
Psychosom Med. 2018; 80(8):698-709 Doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000630 [OPEN ACCESS]
Web of Science PubMed PUBMED Central FullText FullText_MUG

 

Co-Autor*innen der Med Uni Graz
Durdevic Marija
Trauner Michael
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Abstract:
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is associated with alterations along the brain-gut-microbiota axis. Previous studies have suggested a parallel segregation of microbial features and psychological burden in IBS. This study aimed at exploring the microbial correlates of psychological distress in patients with IBS. Forty-eight patients with IBS (Rome III criteria, M (SD) age = 42 (15) years, 35 female, 25 diarrhea-dominant, 5 constipation-dominant, and 18 alternating-type IBS) were assessed for psychological and clinical variables with validated questionnaires, fecal samples underwent microbial 16S rRNA analyses (regions V1-2). Microbial analyses comprised examination of alpha and beta diversity, correlational analyses of bacterial abundance and comparisons among subgroups defined by thresholds of psychological and IBS symptom variables, and machine learning to identify bacterial patterns corresponding with psychological distress. Thirty-one patients (65%) showed elevated psychological distress, 22 (31%) anxiety, and 10 depression (21%). Microbial beta diversity was significantly associated with distress and depression (q = .036 each, q values are p values false discovery rate-corrected for multiple testing). Depression was negatively associated with Lachnospiraceae abundance (Spearman's ρ = -0.58, q = .018). Patients exceeding thresholds of distress, anxiety, depression, and stress perception showed significantly higher abundances of Proteobacteria (q = .020-.036). Patients with anxiety were characterized by elevated Bacteroidaceae (q = .036). A signature of 148 unclassified species accounting for 3.9% of total bacterial abundance co-varied systematically with the presence of psychological distress. Psychological variables significantly segregated gut microbial features, underscoring the role of brain-gut-microbiota interaction in IBS. A microbial signature corresponding with psychological distress was identified. ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT02536131, retrospectively registered.
Find related publications in this database (using NLM MeSH Indexing)
Adult -
Anxiety - epidemiology
Anxiety - microbiology
Bacteroidaceae - isolation & purification
Clostridiales - isolation & purification
Comorbidity -
Depression - epidemiology
Depression - microbiology
Female -
Gastrointestinal Microbiome -
Humans -
Irritable Bowel Syndrome - epidemiology
Irritable Bowel Syndrome - microbiology
Male -
Middle Aged -
Proteobacteria - isolation & purification
Stress, Psychological - epidemiology
Stress, Psychological - microbiology

Find related publications in this database (Keywords)
anxiety
depression
gut-brain-microbiome axis
irritable bowel syndrome
machine learning
psychological distress
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