Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK.
Centre for Inflammation Biology and Cancer Immunology, King's College London, London, UK.
Clin Exp Immunol. 2019 Sep;197(3):308-318. doi: 10.1111/cei.13276. Epub 2019 Mar 11.
Depressive symptoms are reported by more than 20% of people with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), while sleep difficulties and fatigue are even more common. Co-morbid depressive symptoms predict a poor IBD course, including increased risk of relapse and surgery, which is inconsistently improved by psychological treatments. Rather than being distinct systems, there is compelling evidence for bidirectional communication between gut and brain, driven by neural, metabolic, endocrine and inflammatory mediators. An emerging concept is that depressive symptoms may be mechanistically linked to excess inflammation and dysregulation of the gut-brain axis. Given the close link between the intestinal microbiota and host immune responses, patients prone to shifts in their intestinal microbiome, including smokers, those with poor diet and early life stress, may be exposed to exaggerated immune responses. Excess inflammation is associated with brain changes (depressive symptoms, fatigue, sleep difficulties) and worsening gastrointestinal symptoms, which are exacerbated by psychological distress. Equally, treatments both for depressive symptoms and IBD provide opportunities to break this cycle by reducing the causes and effects of inflammation. As well as addressing potential risk factors such as smoking and diet, treatments to alter the microbiome may reduce depressive symptoms. Observational evidence suggests that anti-inflammatory treatments for IBD may improve co-morbid depressive symptoms correlating with reduction in inflammation. With a growing range of treatments targeting inflammation centrally, peripherally and in the gut, IBD provides a unique model to understand the interplay between brain and gut in the pathogenesis of depressive symptoms, both in IBD and in the whole population.
炎症性肠病 (IBD) 患者中有 20%以上报告存在抑郁症状,而睡眠困难和疲劳则更为常见。合并存在的抑郁症状预示着 IBD 病程不佳,包括复发和手术风险增加,尽管心理治疗可在一定程度上改善这种情况,但效果并不稳定。肠道和大脑之间并非是两个独立的系统,而是存在着强有力的双向通讯,由神经、代谢、内分泌和炎症介质驱动。一个新兴概念是,抑郁症状可能与过度炎症和肠道-大脑轴的失调存在机制上的联系。鉴于肠道微生物群与宿主免疫反应之间的紧密联系,那些肠道微生物组容易发生变化的患者,包括吸烟者、饮食不良者和童年期压力较大者,可能会暴露于过度的免疫反应中。过度炎症与大脑变化(抑郁症状、疲劳、睡眠困难)和胃肠道症状恶化相关,而心理困扰会使这些情况进一步加重。同样,治疗抑郁症状和 IBD 的方法都为打破这种循环提供了机会,即减轻炎症的原因和影响。除了处理潜在的风险因素,如吸烟和饮食外,改变微生物组的治疗方法也可能减轻抑郁症状。观察性证据表明,IBD 的抗炎治疗可能会改善合并存在的抑郁症状,其疗效与炎症的减轻相关。随着针对炎症的中枢、外周和肠道的治疗方法不断增多,IBD 为理解抑郁症状的发病机制中大脑和肠道之间的相互作用提供了一个独特的模型,不仅在 IBD 患者中如此,在整个人群中也是如此。