Stress and the Gut-Brain Axis: Implications for Cancer, Inflammation and Sepsis

The gut-brain axis has been discussed, directly or indirectly, for centuries, with the ideas of the gut affecting anything from moods to overall physiology being discussed across the centuries. With a recent explosion in research that looks to the microbiota as a mechanistic link between the gut and...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of surgical research 2021-10, Vol.266, p.336-344
Hauptverfasser: Moughnyeh, Mohamad M., Brawner, Kyle M., Kennedy, Bethany A., Yeramilli, Venkata A., Udayakumar, Neha, Graham, Jessica A., Martin, Colin A.
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container_end_page 344
container_issue
container_start_page 336
container_title The Journal of surgical research
container_volume 266
creator Moughnyeh, Mohamad M.
Brawner, Kyle M.
Kennedy, Bethany A.
Yeramilli, Venkata A.
Udayakumar, Neha
Graham, Jessica A.
Martin, Colin A.
description The gut-brain axis has been discussed, directly or indirectly, for centuries, with the ideas of the gut affecting anything from moods to overall physiology being discussed across the centuries. With a recent explosion in research that looks to the microbiota as a mechanistic link between the gut and the brain, one sees that the gut-brain axis has various means of communication, such as through the vagus nerve and the enteric nervous system and can use the metabolites in the gut to communicate to the brain. The purpose of this review is to view the gut-brain axis through the lens of stress and how stress, from the prenatal period all the way through adulthood can impact the physiology of a human being. Studies have shown multiple mechanisms of measurable change with disruption in the microbiota that lead to behavioral changes. There are also effects of gut inflammation on the brain and the corresponding systemic response observed. The overall literature is encouraging that the more understanding of the gut-brain axis, the greater ability to wield that understanding for therapeutic benefits.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jss.2021.02.055
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subjects cancer
Gut-brain axis
Inflammation
prenatal
Sepsis
Stress
title Stress and the Gut-Brain Axis: Implications for Cancer, Inflammation and Sepsis
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