• Gut microbiome dysregulation implicated in OCD

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    Gut microbiome dysregulation implicated in OCD

    Publish date: April 17, 2017
    By: Bruce Jancin Clinical Psychiatry News


    Vitals
    AT ANXIETY AND DEPRESSION CONFERENCE 2017



    SAN FRANCISCO – Patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder have a gut bacterial microbiome marked by diminished species diversity and abundance, compared with that of healthy controls, according to the first study to examine the issue.

    Results of this pilot study also suggest that OCD patients with tic disorder have a distinctly different gut microbiome, compared with other OCD patients, Jasmine Turna said at the annual conference of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America.


    Jasmine Turna, a PhD candidate in neuroscience at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.
    Bruce Jancin/Frontline Medical News
    Jasmine Turna
    The impetus for this first-ever study of the gut microbiome in OCD was the mounting evidence that the microbiome may play a broad role in modulating bidirectional communication between the brain and gut. Gut bacteria are known to produce serotonin and
    dopamine, neurotransmitters implicated in numerous psychiatric disorders. Moreover, rodent studies suggest that manipulation of the gut microbiome using a probiotic can diminish pathologic anxiety (Behav Pharmacol. 2014 Feb;25[1]:71-9). And anxiety is a
    predominant symptom in OCD, explained Ms. Turna, a PhD candidate in neuroscience at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ont.

    She reported on 11 OCD patients and 12 healthy controls who underwent gut microbiome analysis using DNA extracted from their morning stool samples. Results from another nine OCD patients and 10 controls remained pending at the time of the conference but
    will be completed shortly.

    In addition to the decreased abundance and diversity of bacteria present in the microbiomes of the OCD patients, compared with controls, another key finding was that the OCD patients had increased levels of systemic inflammation. Their mean level of high-
    sensitivity C-reactive protein was 3.03 mg/L, compared with 1.1 mg/L in the controls. In addition, the microbiome in those OCD patients who had elevated systemic inflammation as defined by a CRP level greater than 2.0 mg/L was more restricted than was
    that of OCD patients with a normal-range CRP.

    In an interview, Ms. Turna noted that a cross-sectional study such as this is hypothesis generating and not definitive. Even if these findings are replicated, that will not answer the key question of whether the altered microbiome present in OCD patients
    is a contributing cause or a consequence of the psychiatric disorder. But she and her coinvestigators already have launched a prospective randomized controlled trial that attempts to address this question by having a group of OCD patients regularly
    consume a probiotic in an effort to diversify their gut microbiome.

    “Maybe getting more fermented foods into the diet – kimchi, miso, yogurt, kefir – could be an adjunctive therapy,” she said. “Right now, OCD research is kind of at a standstill. Our treatments work in a lot of people, but they also don’t work
    in a lot of people. Our research opens up a new place to explore.”

    Ms. Turna reported having no financial conflicts.

    bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com


    http://www.mdedge.com/clinicalpsychiatrynews/article/135918/anxiety-disorders/gut-microbiome-dysregulation-implicated-ocd

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