Al-Beltagi Mohammed, Saeed Nermin Kamal
Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Tanta 31527, Algharbia, Egypt.
Department of Pediatrics, University Medical Center, King Abdulla Medica City, Arabian Gulf University, Manama 26671, Bahrain.
World J Gastrointest Pathophysiol. 2022 Sep 22;13(5):143-156. doi: 10.4291/wjgp.v13.i5.143.
The brain and the gut are linked together with a complex, bi-path link known as the gut-brain axis through the central and enteric nervous systems. So, the brain directly affects and controls the gut through various neurocrine and endocrine processes, and the gut impacts the brain different mechanisms. Epilepsy is a central nervous system (CNS) disorder with abnormal brain activity, causing repeated seizures due to a transient excessive or synchronous alteration in the brain's electrical activity. Due to the strong relationship between the enteric and the CNS, gastrointestinal dysfunction may increase the risk of epilepsy. Meanwhile, about 2.5% of patients with epilepsy were misdiagnosed as having gastrointestinal disorders, especially in children below the age of one year. Gut dysbiosis also has a significant role in epileptogenesis. Epilepsy, in turn, affects the gastrointestinal tract in different forms, such as abdominal aura, epilepsy with abdominal pain, and the adverse effects of medications on the gut and the gut microbiota. Epilepsy with abdominal pain, a type of temporal lobe epilepsy, is an uncommon cause of abdominal pain. Epilepsy also can present with postictal states with gastrointestinal manifestations such as postictal hypersalivation, hyperphagia, or compulsive water drinking. At the same time, antiseizure medications have many gastrointestinal side effects. On the other hand, some antiseizure medications may improve some gastrointestinal diseases. Many gut manipulations were used successfully to manage epilepsy. Prebiotics, probiotics, synbiotics, postbiotics, a ketogenic diet, fecal microbiota transplantation, and vagus nerve stimulation were used successfully to treat some patients with epilepsy. Other manipulations, such as omental transposition, still need more studies. This narrative review will discuss the different ways the gut and epilepsy affect each other.
大脑和肠道通过中枢神经系统和肠神经系统,经由一种被称为肠-脑轴的复杂双通路联系在一起。因此,大脑通过各种神经分泌和内分泌过程直接影响和控制肠道,而肠道则通过不同机制影响大脑。癫痫是一种中枢神经系统(CNS)疾病,大脑活动异常,由于大脑电活动的短暂过度或同步改变而导致反复发作。由于肠神经系统和中枢神经系统之间存在密切关系,胃肠功能障碍可能会增加癫痫风险。同时,约2.5%的癫痫患者被误诊为患有胃肠疾病,尤其是1岁以下的儿童。肠道菌群失调在癫痫发生过程中也起着重要作用。反过来,癫痫又以不同形式影响胃肠道,如腹部先兆、腹痛性癫痫以及药物对肠道和肠道微生物群的不良影响。腹痛性癫痫是颞叶癫痫的一种,是腹痛的罕见原因。癫痫发作后状态也可能伴有胃肠道表现,如发作后流涎过多、食欲亢进或强迫性饮水。同时,抗癫痫药物有许多胃肠道副作用。另一方面,一些抗癫痫药物可能会改善某些胃肠道疾病。许多肠道干预措施已成功用于治疗癫痫。益生元、益生菌、合生元、后生元、生酮饮食、粪便微生物群移植和迷走神经刺激已成功用于治疗一些癫痫患者。其他干预措施,如网膜移位,仍需要更多研究。这篇叙述性综述将讨论肠道和癫痫相互影响的不同方式。