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  #1   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 14:58
Judynyc's Avatar
Judynyc Judynyc is offline
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Default Changing gut bacteria through diet affects brain function, UCLA study shows

Changing gut bacteria through diet affects brain function, UCLA study shows

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_relea...--cgb052813.php

Quote:
UCLA researchers now have the first evidence that bacteria ingested in food can affect brain function in humans. In an early proof-of-concept study of healthy women, they found that women who regularly consumed beneficial bacteria known as probiotics through yogurt showed altered brain function, both while in a resting state and in response to an emotion-recognition task.

The study, conducted by scientists with UCLA's Gail and Gerald Oppenheimer Family Center for Neurobiology of Stress and the Ahmanson–Lovelace Brain Mapping Center at UCLA, appears in the June edition of the peer-reviewed journal Gastroenterology.

The discovery that changing the bacterial environment, or microbiota, in the gut can affect the brain carries significant implications for future research that could point the way toward dietary or drug interventions to improve brain function, the researchers said.

"Many of us have a container of yogurt in our refrigerator that we may eat for enjoyment, for calcium or because we think it might help our health in other ways," said Dr. Kirsten Tillisch, an associate professor of medicine at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine and lead author of the study. "Our findings indicate that some of the contents of yogurt may actually change the way our brain responds to the environment. When we consider the implications of this work, the old sayings 'you are what you eat' and 'gut feelings' take on new meaning."

Researchers have known that the brain sends signals to the gut, which is why stress and other emotions can contribute to gastrointestinal symptoms. This study shows what has been suspected but until now had been proved only in animal studies: that signals travel the opposite way as well.

"Time and time again, we hear from patients that they never felt depressed or anxious until they started experiencing problems with their gut," Tillisch said. "Our study shows that the gut–brain connection is a two-way street."

The small study involved 36 women between the ages of 18 and 55. Researchers divided the women into three groups: one group ate a specific yogurt containing a mix of several probiotics — bacteria thought to have a positive effect on the intestines — twice a day for four weeks; another group consumed a dairy product that looked and tasted like the yogurt but contained no probiotics; and a third group ate no product at all.

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans conducted both before and after the four-week study period looked at the women's brains in a state of rest and in response to an emotion-recognition task in which they viewed a series of pictures of people with angry or frightened faces and matched them to other faces showing the same emotions. This task, designed to measure the engagement of affective and cognitive brain regions in response to a visual stimulus, was chosen because previous research in animals had linked changes in gut flora to changes in affective behaviors.

The researchers found that, compared with the women who didn't consume the probiotic yogurt, those who did showed a decrease in activity in both the insula — which processes and integrates internal body sensations, like those form the gut — and the somatosensory cortex during the emotional reactivity task.

Further, in response to the task, these women had a decrease in the engagement of a widespread network in the brain that includes emotion-, cognition- and sensory-related areas. The women in the other two groups showed a stable or increased activity in this network.

During the resting brain scan, the women consuming probiotics showed greater connectivity between a key brainstem region known as the periaqueductal grey and cognition-associated areas of the prefrontal cortex. The women who ate no product at all, on the other hand, showed greater connectivity of the periaqueductal grey to emotion- and sensation-related regions, while the group consuming the non-probiotic dairy product showed results in between.

The researchers were surprised to find that the brain effects could be seen in many areas, including those involved in sensory processing and not merely those associated with emotion, Tillisch said.

The knowledge that signals are sent from the intestine to the brain and that they can be modulated by a dietary change is likely to lead to an expansion of research aimed at finding new strategies to prevent or treat digestive, mental and neurological disorders, said Dr. Emeran Mayer, a professor of medicine, physiology and psychiatry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study's senior author.

"There are studies showing that what we eat can alter the composition and products of the gut flora — in particular, that people with high-vegetable, fiber-based diets have a different composition of their microbiota, or gut environment, than people who eat the more typical Western diet that is high in fat and carbohydrates," Mayer said. "Now we know that this has an effect not only on the metabolism but also affects brain function."

The UCLA researchers are seeking to pinpoint particular chemicals produced by gut bacteria that may be triggering the signals to the brain. They also plan to study whether people with gastrointestinal symptoms such as bloating, abdominal pain and altered bowel movements have improvements in their digestive symptoms which correlate with changes in brain response.

Meanwhile, Mayer notes that other researchers are studying the potential benefits of certain probiotics in yogurts on mood symptoms such as anxiety. He said that other nutritional strategies may also be found to be beneficial.

By demonstrating the brain effects of probiotics, the study also raises the question of whether repeated courses of antibiotics can affect the brain, as some have speculated. Antibiotics are used extensively in neonatal intensive care units and in childhood respiratory tract infections, and such suppression of the normal microbiota may have longterm consequences on brain development.

Finally, as the complexity of the gut flora and its effect on the brain is better understood, researchers may find ways to manipulate the intestinal contents to treat chronic pain conditions or other brain related diseases, including, potentially, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and autism.

Answers will be easier to come by in the near future as the declining cost of profiling a person's microbiota renders such tests more routine, Mayer said.


###


The study was funded by Danone Research. Mayer has served on the company's scientific advisory board. Three of the study authors (Denis Guyonnet, Sophie Legrain-Raspaud and Beatrice Trotin) are employed by Danone Research and were involved in the planning and execution of the study (providing the products) but had no role in the analysis or interpretation of the results.

UCLA's Oppenheimer Family Center for Neurobiology of Stress is an NIH-funded multidisciplinary, translational research program partially supported by philanthropy. Its mission is to identify the role of the brain in health and medical disease. The Center is comprised of several research programs which focus on the interactions of the brain with the digestive, cardiovascular and urological systems, chronic pain and mind brain body interactions.
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  #2   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 14:59
Enomarb Enomarb is offline
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Very interesting!
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  #3   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 15:00
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Judynyc Judynyc is offline
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Originally Posted by Enomarb
Very interesting!

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  #4   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 15:15
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WereBear WereBear is offline
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One part of my gut healing program was a variety of different probiotics, along with gluten elimination, and I do feel good because of it!
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  #5   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 17:21
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deirdra deirdra is offline
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Originally Posted by WereBear
One part of my gut healing program was a variety of different probiotics, along with gluten elimination, and I do feel good because of it!
What probiotics worked best for you?
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  #6   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 17:25
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WereBear WereBear is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by deirdra
What probiotics worked best for you?


I used a strawberry flavored "million biotics" bottle, and the "Super 8" kind that came from the health store fridge.

But I also used Greek yogurt, AND homemade sauerkraut from a local deli.

I simply availed myself of whatever was available to me, on the theory that there was safety in numbers
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  #7   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 18:08
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starrunner starrunner is offline
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This is interesting! I always feel so much better when I am eating Greek Yogurt. I eat the plain, high fat kind (Fage and Greek Gods).
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  #8   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 18:10
M Levac M Levac is offline
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Quote:
The small study involved 36 women between the ages of 18 and 55. Researchers divided the women into three groups: one group ate a specific yogurt containing a mix of several probiotics — bacteria thought to have a positive effect on the intestines — twice a day for four weeks; another group consumed a dairy product that looked and tasted like the yogurt but contained no probiotics; and a third group ate no product at all.

But was not yogurt, perhaps? I mean, if it was, they'd have said something like "yogurt without probiotics", not "dairy product that looked and tasted like yogurt". Doesn't jibe.

Here's Seth Roberts' experiment with butter, lard, olive oil, and other fats, and their effects on gut and brain functions: http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=433300

It's just an experiment of n=1, but like the article said about their study, it's "proof of concept" too. No probiotics. Just fat.

Here's the scenario I envision. Danone uses real yogurt, with all the fat it's supposed to have, for the probiotics arm of the study. But uses a "dairy product that looks and tastes like yogurt", but isn't yogurt on the no-probiotics arm. Yogurt doesn't have much fat, so we can't really say how big of an effect this will have. But what we can say with absolute certainty is that no-fat has no effect whatsoever, because it's not there. So, if we want to show an effect, we just compared something to nothing, and I'm willing to bet this is exactly what they did on the yogurt side of things. Basically, they compared yogurt-probiotics and no-yogurt-no-probiotics. Who's to know what's real. But back to my scenario. The probiotics yogurt appears to be better than the no-probiotics yogurt, but only because it's real yogurt compared to no-yogurt. Low-fat/no-fat sells much better than full-fat yogurt. They can't lie about the fat content of the yogurt we buy at the store. There is no such restriction for experimental studies, because nobody's selling anything. So, now they can sell low-fat/no-fat yogurt with a claim that it's better because of the probiotics.

Yay, science.
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  #9   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 18:18
M Levac M Levac is offline
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It just occurred to me that whatever bacteria we add to yogurt must survive digestion. Then it occurs to me that some nasty bacteria (and other pathogens) do survive digestion, only to give us nasty gut disorders. Evidently, beneficial bacteria survive as well, but this science is in its infancy, so I don't trust any claim about it.
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  #10   ^
Old Fri, Jul-12-13, 20:43
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teaser teaser is offline
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http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/805012

Same story different source;
Quote:
A new study provides the first evidence in humans that probiotics in the diet can modulate brain activity.

In a proof-of-concept study using functional MRI (fMRI), researchers found that women who regularly consumed probiotic-containing yogurt showed altered activity of brain regions that control central processing of emotion and sensation. The study was funded by Danone Research.

"This study is unique because it is the first to show an interaction between a probiotic and the brain in humans," lead author Kirsten Tillisch, MD, associate professor, Oppenheimer Family Center for Neurobiology of Stress, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California Los Angeles, told Medscape Medical News.

"We can't say whether the effects are beneficial; that will take larger studies with more complex designs. One of the areas this will move to is study of disease groups like irritable bowel syndrome and anxiety," she added.

The results appear in the June issue of Gastroenterology.

Modulating Brain Function

"This is a very important study as up to now most of the evidence that the gut microbiota can influence brain and behavior have emerged from studies in mouse models including our own work (Bravo et al., PNAS 2011)," John Cryan, PhD, professor and head of the Department of Anatomy and Neuroscience, University College Cork, Ireland, who was not involved in the study, told Medscape Medical News.

"Tillisch and colleagues now have neatly shown that probiotics can also affect resting brain activity in human subjects using neuroimaging techniques. This gives credence to the idea that we may eventually modulate brain function in disease states using probiotics. That said, it is a small study, only in women, and the mechanism as to how the bacteria are inducing their effects remains unclear," Dr. Cryan said.


Dr. Kirsten Tillisch
The study involved 36 healthy women with no gastrointestinal or psychiatric symptoms. Twice daily for 4 weeks, 12 women ate a fermented yogurt product containing the probiotics Bifidobacterium animalis subsp Lactis, Streptococcus thermophiles, Lactobacillus bulgaricus, and Lactococcus lactis subsp Lactis; 11 women ate a nonfermented milk product (controls), and 13 received no intervention.

The women underwent fMRI before and after the intervention to measure resting brain activity and brain responses to an emotion-recognition task in which they viewed a series of pictures of people with angry or scared faces and matched them to other faces showing the same emotions. The researchers say they chose this task because studies in animals have linked changes in gut flora to changes in affective behaviors.

During the emotional reactivity task, the probiotic group showed significantly reduced activity (P = .004) in a widely distributed functional network containing affective, viscerosensory, and somatosensory cortices.

During resting fMRI, the probiotic group showed greater connectivity between the periaqueductal grey matter of the midbrain and cognition-associated areas of the prefrontal cortex.

These changes were not observed in the group that consumed the nonfermented milk product; "thus the findings appear to be related to the ingested bacteria strains and their effects on the host," the authors say.

Gut-Brain Interactions

This study, they say, "clearly demonstrates" an effect of probiotic ingestion on evoked brain responses and resting-state networks in women. However, it was not designed to address the mechanisms mediating this effect.

Going forward, they say, "identification of the signaling pathways between the microbiota and the brain in humans is needed to solidify our understanding of microbiota gut-brain interactions. If confirmed, modulation of the gut flora can provide novel targets for the treatment of patients with abnormal pain and stress responses associated with gut dysbiosis."

"The knowledge that signals are sent from the intestine to the brain and that they can be modulated by a dietary change is likely to lead to an expansion of research aimed at finding new strategies to prevent or treat digestive, mental and neurological disorders," Emeran Mayer, MD, professor of medicine, physiology, and psychiatry at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA and the study's senior author, told Medscape Medical News.


I actually looked this up because I couldn't tell from the Eureka report whether the change was supposed to be beneficial or not. My first read-through, I assumed it was good; maybe because I was primed here;

Quote:
they found that women who regularly consumed beneficial bacteria known as probiotics through yogurt showed altered brain function,
with the term "beneficial bacteria."
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