Department of Neurology, The First Affiliated Hospital of USTC, Division of Life Sciences and Medicine, Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China.
Anhui Province Key Laboratory of Biomedical Imaging and Intelligent Processing, Institute of Artificial Intelligence, Hefei Comprehensive National Science Center, Hefei, China.
Gut Microbes. 2024 Jan-Dec;16(1):2357177. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2024.2357177. Epub 2024 May 23.
The prevalence of eating disorders has been increasing over the last 50 years. Binge eating disorder (BED) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are two typical disabling, costly and life-threatening eating disorders that substantially compromise the physical well-being of individuals while undermining their psychological functioning. The distressing and recurrent episodes of binge eating are commonly observed in both BED and BN; however, they diverge as BN often involves the adoption of inappropriate compensatory behaviors aimed at averting weight gain. Normal eating behavior is coordinated by a well-regulated trade-off between intestinal and central ingestive mechanism. Conversely, despite the fact that the etiology of BED and BN remains incompletely resolved, emerging evidence corroborates the notion that dysbiosis of gastrointestinal microbiome and its metabolites, alteration of gut-brain axis, as well as malfunctioning central circuitry regulating motivation, execution and reward all contribute to the pathology of binge eating. In this review, we aim to outline the current state of knowledge pertaining to the potential mechanisms through which each component of the gut-brain axis participates in binge eating behaviors, and provide insight for the development of microbiome-based therapeutic interventions that hold promise in ameliorating patients afflicted with binge eating disorders.
在过去的 50 年里,饮食失调的患病率一直在上升。暴食障碍(BED)和神经性贪食症(BN)是两种典型的使人丧失能力、代价高昂且危及生命的饮食失调症,它们严重损害个体的身体健康,同时破坏他们的心理功能。暴食和反复暴食发作在 BED 和 BN 中都很常见;然而,它们也存在差异,因为 BN 通常涉及采用不适当的补偿行为来避免体重增加。正常的饮食行为是由肠道和中枢摄食机制之间的良好调节来协调的。相反,尽管 BED 和 BN 的病因仍不完全清楚,但新出现的证据证实了这样一种观点,即胃肠道微生物组及其代谢物的失调、肠道-大脑轴的改变以及调节动机、执行和奖励的中枢电路功能障碍都有助于暴食的发生。在这篇综述中,我们旨在概述与肠道-大脑轴的各个组成部分参与暴食行为的潜在机制相关的现有知识,并为基于微生物组的治疗干预的发展提供见解,这些干预措施有望改善患有暴食障碍的患者。