Gut Microbiota-Based Interventions for Parkinson’s Disease: Neuroprotective Mechanisms and Current Perspective
Probiotics and Antimicrobial Proteins,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown
Published: Jan. 15, 2025
Language: Английский
Modulatory effects of traditional Chinese medicines on gut microbiota and the microbiota-gut-x axis
Tingting Luo,
No information about this author
Qingya Che,
No information about this author
Ziyi Guo
No information about this author
et al.
Frontiers in Pharmacology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
15
Published: Oct. 9, 2024
The
gut
microbiota
offers
numerous
benefits
to
the
human
body,
including
promotion
of
nutrient
absorption,
participation
in
metabolic
processes,
and
enhancement
immune
function.
Recent
studies
have
introduced
concept
gut-organ
axis,
which
encompasses
interactions
such
as
gut-brain
gut-liver
gut-lung
axis.
This
underscores
complex
interplay
between
various
organs
tissues,
brain,
heart,
lungs,
liver,
kidneys,
muscles,
bones.
Growing
evidence
indicates
that
can
influence
onset
progression
multi-organ
system
diseases
through
their
effects
on
Traditional
Chinese
medicine
has
demonstrated
significant
efficacy
regulating
gastrointestinal
system,
leveraging
its
unique
advantages.
Considerable
advancements
been
made
understanding
role
axis
within
mechanisms
action
traditional
medicine.
review
aims
elucidate
roles
health,
explore
potential
connections
microbiota,
examine
therapeutic
microbiota-gut-organ
Furthermore,
addresses
limitations
challenges
present
current
research
while
proposing
directions
for
future
investigations
this
area.
Language: Английский
Diet-Gut Microbiome Nexus: A New Paradigm in Food-Based Mental Disease Therapeutics
Sakshi Anand,
No information about this author
Pradeep Kumar,
No information about this author
Sevaram Singh
No information about this author
et al.
Food Reviews International,
Journal Year:
2025,
Volume and Issue:
unknown, P. 1 - 27
Published: March 19, 2025
Language: Английский
Bibliometric analysis of research hotspots and trends on the relationship between the gut microbiota and depression from 2020 to 2024
Dingwen Xu,
No information about this author
Jinnan Wu,
No information about this author
Zhihua Lu
No information about this author
et al.
Frontiers in Microbiology,
Journal Year:
2024,
Volume and Issue:
15
Published: Nov. 11, 2024
In
recent
years,
an
increasing
body
of
research
has
illustrated
a
strong
correlation
between
gut
microbiota
and
depression.
However,
there
yet
to
be
comprehensive
discussion
or
summary
the
latest
advancements
trends
in
this
field.
Language: Английский