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Journal ArticleDOI

Targeting the microbiome-gut-brain axis for improving cognition in schizophrenia and major mood disorders: A narrative review.

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TLDR
Future clinical trials using probiotics, prebiotics, antibiotics, or faecal microbiota transplantation need to consider potential mechanistic pathways such as the HPA axis, the immune system, or gut-brain axis hormones involved in appetite control and energy homeostasis.
Abstract
Cognitive impairment has been consistently found to be a core feature of serious mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and major mood disorders (major depression and bipolar disorder). In recent years, a great effort has been made in elucidating the biological causes of cognitive deficits and the search for new biomarkers of cognition. Microbiome and gut-brain axis (MGB) hormones have been postulated to be potential biomarkers of cognition in serious mental illnesses. The main aim of this review was to synthesize current evidence on the association of microbiome and gut-brain hormones on cognitive processes in schizophrenia and major mood disorders and the association of MGB hormones with stress and the immune system. Our review underscores the role of the MGB axis on cognitive aspects of serious mental illnesses with the potential use of agents targeting the gut microbiota as cognitive enhancers. However, the current evidence for clinical trials focused on the MGB axis as cognitive enhancers in these clinical populations is scarce. Future clinical trials using probiotics, prebiotics, antibiotics, or faecal microbiota transplantation need to consider potential mechanistic pathways such as the HPA axis, the immune system, or gut-brain axis hormones involved in appetite control and energy homeostasis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of Poly I:C induced maternal immune activation on offspring's gut microbiome diversity - Implications for schizophrenia.

TL;DR: In this article, the relevance of microbiome alterations in the polyriboinosinic-polyribocytidylic (PolyI:C) mouse model to human schizophrenia was explored.
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Role of Probiotics and Diet in the Management of Neurological Diseases and Mood States: A Review

TL;DR: In this paper , a review summarizes the importance and involvement of probiotics and diet in neuroprotection and managing representative neurological disorders, injuries and mood states, and concludes that probiotics could be considered an adjunct therapy to manage metabolic and psychiatric diseases.
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Food, nutrition and microbiota: what about the elderly?

TL;DR: The following review presents the objective of developing a search in various sources of information on the relevance of food and nutrition for the maintenance and balance of the microbiota in older people and mentions some contributions from new research.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of antipsychotic medications on microbiome and weight gain in children and adolescents

TL;DR: Children and adolescent populations, which have not previously received much attention, are of great interest because they may be most vulnerable to gut microbiome changes and may carry long-term metabolic effects into adulthood.
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The role of prebiotics in cognition, anxiety, and depression.

TL;DR: The present manuscript reviews the state-of-art of the effects of prebiotics in cognitive impairment, anxiety, and depressive disorders and suggests that patients suffering from cognitive deficits, depression, and anxiety with a new tool to minimize disease symptoms and increase the quality of life.
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The role of the gut microbiome in the development of schizophrenia.

TL;DR: Unravelling MGB axis signalling in the context of an evolving dimensional framework in schizophrenia may provide a more complete understanding of the neurobiological architecture of this complex condition and offers the possibility of translational interventions.
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Acyl ghrelin improves cognition, synaptic plasticity deficits and neuroinflammation following amyloid β (Aβ1-40) administration in mice.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that ghrelin deletion affects memory performance and also that acyl Ghrelin treatment may delay the onset of early events of AD, which supports the idea thatAcyl ghrelIn treatment may be therapeutically beneficial with respect to restricting disease progression in AD.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential involvement of CCK-A and CCK-B receptors in the regulation of locomotor activity in the mouse.

TL;DR: The opposite effect of devazepide and L-365,260 on caerulein- and apomorphine-induced hypolocomotion is probably related to the antagonistic role of CCK-A andCCK-B receptor subtypes in the regulation of mesencephalic dopaminergic neurons.
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