Gut-Microbiota, and Multiple Sclerosis: Background, Evidence, and Perspectives.
Clelia AltieriBarbara SperanzaMaria Rosaria CorboMilena SinigagliaAntonio BevilacquaPublished in: Nutrients (2023)
Many scientific studies reveal a significant connection between human intestinal microbiota, eating habits, and the development of chronic-degenerative diseases; therefore, alterations in the composition and function of the microbiota may be accompanied by different chronic inflammatory mechanisms. Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory demyelinating disease of the central nervous system (CNS), in which autoreactive immune cells attack the myelin sheaths of the neurons. The purpose of this paper was to describe the main changes that occur in the gut microbiota of MS patients, with a focus on both microbiota and its implications for health and disease, as well as the variables that influence it. Another point stressed by this paper is the role of microbiota as a triggering factor to modulate the responses of the innate and adaptive immune systems, both in the intestine and in the brain. In addition, a comprehensive overview of the taxa modified by the disease is presented, with some points on microbiota modulation as a therapeutic approach for MS. Finally, the significance of gastro-intestinal pains (indirectly related to dysbiosis) was assessed using a case study (questionnaire for MS patients), as was the willingness of MS patients to modulate gut microbiota with probiotics.
Keyphrases
- multiple sclerosis
- mass spectrometry
- white matter
- ms ms
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- healthcare
- oxidative stress
- immune response
- prognostic factors
- peritoneal dialysis
- public health
- cross sectional
- mental health
- patient reported outcomes
- spinal cord
- climate change
- weight loss
- resting state
- cerebrospinal fluid
- functional connectivity
- subarachnoid hemorrhage