Researchers characterized brain-gut microbiome (BGM) patterns related to stress resilience.
By Tarun Sai LomteReviewed by Lily Ramsey, LLMJun 25 2024 In a recent study published in Nature Mental Health , researchers characterized brain-gut microbiome patterns related to stress resilience.
The composition and function of the human microbiome have been linked to stress-related disorders. The gut microbiome can modulate psychological functioning via the BGM system and has been implicated in conferring stress resilience. All subjects underwent multimodal brain magnetic resonance imaging , provided stool samples, and completed questionnaires.
The team leveraged the data integration analysis for biomarker discovery using the latent components approach to elucidate interactions among clinical/behavioral, central , and peripheral markers associated with resilience phenotypes. The HR group showed higher mean levels of mindfulness and extraversion but lower average levels of neuroticism, anxiety, difficulties with attention, verbal memory, language, visual perception, and perceived stress than the LR group.
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