AI Article Synopsis

  • Research shows that our emotions and gut health are connected, which is seen in conditions like irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
  • Scientists studied mice that were stressed to see how it affected their gut, and this stress caused changes like faster digestion and more pain.
  • A traditional medicine helped improve these gut issues in the stressed mice, suggesting that stress-related depression can lead to IBS-like symptoms without any physical damage to the gut.

Article Abstract

Increasing evidence has demonstrated that emotional states and intestinal conditions are inter-connected in so-called "brain-gut interactions." Indeed, many psychiatric disorders are accompanied by gastrointestinal symptoms, such as the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). However, the functional connection remains elusive, partly because there are few useful experimental animal models. Here, we focused on a highly validated animal model of stress-induced psychiatric disorders, such as depression, known as the chronic vicarious social defeat stress (cVSDS) model mice, which we prepared using exposure to repeated psychological stress, thereafter examining their intestinal conditions. In the charcoal meal test and the capsaicin-induced hyperalgesia test, cVSDS model mice showed a significantly higher intestinal transit ratio and increased visceral pain-related behaviors, respectively. These changes persisted over one month after the stress session. On the other hand, the pathological evaluations of the histological and inflammatory scores of naive and cVSDS model mice did not differ. Furthermore, keishikashakuyakuto-a kampo medicine clinically used for the treatment of IBS-normalized the intestinal motility change in cVSDS model mice. Our results indicate that cVSDS model mice present IBS-like symptoms such as chronic intestinal peristaltic changes and abdominal hyperalgesia without organic lesion. We therefore propose the cVSDS paradigm as a novel animal model of IBS with wide validity, elucidating the correlation between depressive states and intestinal abnormalities.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9582264PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2022.993132DOI Listing

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