From the Channing Division of Network Medicine (C.M., Z.M., J.H.K., A.A., M.J.S., D.D.W.), Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Department of Nutrition (C.M.), University of Massachusetts Amherst; Departments of Nutrition (Y.L., A.A., W.C.W., M.J.S., D.D.W.), Epidemiology (A.A., W.C.W., A.T.C., M.J.S.), and Biostatistics (C.H.), Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA; School of Medicine (C.Y.), Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China; Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center (F.G.), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL; Division of Gastroenterology (A.T.C.), Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; and Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard (A.T.C., C.H., D.D.W), Cambridge, MA..
Neurology. 2023 Nov 14;101(20):e2014-e2025. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207849. Epub 2023 Sep 29.
Little is known regarding the association between intestinal motility patterns and cognitive function in individuals who are baseline cognitively healthy. The gut microbiome may contribute to the association. We examined the association between bowel movement (BM) pattern and cognitive function and explored the role of the gut microbiome in explaining this association.
In this prospective study, we leveraged 3 cohort studies, Nurses' Health Study (NHS), NHSII, and Health Professionals Follow-Up Study (HPFS). Participants reported BM frequency and subjective cognitive function. In a subset of NHSII participants, we assessed cognitive function using an objective neuropsychological battery. We profiled the gut microbiome in a subset of participants using whole-genome shotgun metagenomics. General linear models, Poisson regression, and logistic regression were used to quantify the association of BM frequency with different cognitive measurements.
We followed 112,753 men and women (women: 87.6%) with a mean age of 67.2 years at baseline (NHS: 76 years, NHSII: 59 years, HPFS: 75 years) for a median follow-up of 4 years (NHSII and HPFS: 4 years, NHS: 2 years). Compared with those with BM once daily, participants with BM frequency every 3+ days had significantly worse objective cognitive function, equivalent to 3.0 (95% confidence interval [CI],1.2-4.7) years of chronological cognitive aging. We observed similar J-shape dose-response relationships of BM frequency with the odds of subjective cognitive decline and the likelihood of having more subsequent subjective cognitive complaints (both < 0.001). BM frequencies of every 3+ days and ≥twice/day, compared with once daily, were associated with the odds ratios of subjective cognitive decline of 1.73 (95% CI 1.60-1.86) and 1.37 (95% CI 1.33-1.44), respectively. BM frequency and subjective cognitive decline were significantly associated with the overall gut microbiome configuration (both < 0.005) and specific microbial species in the 515 participants with microbiome data. Butyrate-producing microbial species were depleted in those with less frequent BM and worse cognition, whereas a higher abundance of proinflammatory species was associated with BM frequency of ≥twice/day and worse cognition.
Lower BM frequency was associated with worse cognitive function. The gut microbial dysbiosis may be a mechanistic link underlying the association.
基线认知健康个体的肠道运动模式与认知功能之间的关联知之甚少。肠道微生物组可能与此有关。我们研究了排便模式与认知功能之间的关联,并探讨了肠道微生物组在解释这种关联中的作用。
在这项前瞻性研究中,我们利用了 3 项队列研究,即护士健康研究(NHS)、NHSII 和健康专业人员随访研究(HPFS)。参与者报告了排便频率和主观认知功能。在 NHSII 的一部分参与者中,我们使用客观神经心理学测试评估了认知功能。我们使用全基因组鸟枪法宏基因组学对一部分参与者的肠道微生物组进行了分析。使用一般线性模型、泊松回归和逻辑回归来量化排便频率与不同认知测量之间的关联。
我们对 112753 名男性和女性(女性占 87.6%)进行了随访,他们的平均年龄为 67.2 岁(NHS:76 岁,NHSII:59 岁,HPFS:75 岁),中位随访时间为 4 年(NHSII 和 HPFS:4 年,NHS:2 年)。与每天排便一次的参与者相比,排便频率每 3 天以上的参与者的客观认知功能明显较差,相当于 3.0(95%置信区间 [CI],1.2-4.7)年的生理认知老化。我们观察到,排便频率与主观认知下降的几率和随后出现更多主观认知主诉的可能性之间存在类似的 J 形剂量反应关系(均 < 0.001)。与每天排便一次相比,排便频率每 3 天以上和≥每天两次与主观认知下降的比值比分别为 1.73(95%CI 1.60-1.86)和 1.37(95%CI 1.33-1.44)。排便频率和主观认知下降与 515 名具有微生物组数据的参与者的整体肠道微生物组结构(均 < 0.005)和特定微生物物种显著相关。但产生丁酸的微生物物种在排便频率较低且认知功能较差的患者中被消耗,而促炎物种的丰度较高与排便频率≥每天两次和认知功能较差有关。
较低的排便频率与认知功能较差有关。肠道微生物组失调可能是这种关联的潜在机制。