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Low-level inflammation, immunity, and brain-gut axis in IBS: unraveling the complex relationships

Yi Yuan, X. Wang, S.-M. Huang, Hao Wang, Guo-Ming Shen

2023Gut Microbes79 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Irritable bowel syndrome is a common functional gastrointestinal disorder, and it has been shown that the etiology of irritable bowel syndrome is a multifactorial complex of neurological, inflammatory, and immunological changes. There is growing evidence of low-grade chronic inflammation in irritable bowel patients. The peripheral action response of their intestinal immune factors is integrated into the central nervous system, while the microbiota interacts with the brain-gut axis contributing to the development of low-grade chronic inflammation. The objective of this review is to present a discussion about the impact of immune-brain-gut axis-inflammation interactions on irritable bowel syndrome, its clinical relevance in the course of irritable bowel syndrome disease, and possible therapeutic modalities.

Topics & Concepts

Irritable bowel syndromeInflammationImmune systemGut–brain axisFunctional gastrointestinal disorderDiseaseInflammatory bowel diseaseImmunologyEtiologyImmunityMedicineGastroenterologyInternal medicineGastrointestinal motility and disordersCongenital gastrointestinal and neural anomaliesDermatology and Skin Diseases
Low-level inflammation, immunity, and brain-gut axis in IBS: unraveling the complex relationships | Litcius