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Probiotics and Prebiotics: Any Role in Menopause-Related Diseases?

Luigi BarreaLudovica VerdeRenata Simona AuriemmaClaudia VetraniMauro CataldiEvelyn Frias-ToralGabriella PuglieseElisabetta CamajaniSilvia SavastanoAnnamaria ColaoGiovanna Muscogiuri
Published in: Current nutrition reports (2023)
The human microbiota is a complex community that lives in a mutualism relationship with the host. Menopause is associated with dysbiosis, and these changes in the composition of microbiota in different sites (gut, vaginal, and oral microbiota) might play a role in the pathogenesis of menopause-related diseases (i.e., osteoporosis, breast cancer, endometrial hyperplasia, periodontitis, and cardiometabolic diseases). The present review highlights the pivotal role of microbiota in postmenopausal women health, in particular it (a) may increase intestinal calcium absorption thus preventing osteoporosis, (b) is associated with reduced risk of breast cancer and type 1 endometrial hyperplasia, (c) reduces gingival inflammation and menopausal periodontitis, and (d) beneficially affects multiple cardiometabolic risk factors (i.e., obesity, inflammation, and blood glucose and lipid metabolism). However, whether oral probiotic supplementation might be used for the treatment of menopause-related dysbiosis requires further clarification.
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