Gut microbiota in surgical and critically ill patients

被引:16
作者
Ho, Kwok M. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Kalgudi, Shankar [1 ]
Corbett, Jade-Marie [1 ]
Litton, Edward [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Royal Perth Hosp, Dept Intens Care Med, Perth, WA, Australia
[2] Murdoch Univ, Sch Vet & Life Sci, Perth, WA, Australia
[3] Univ Western Australia, Sch Med, Perth, WA, Australia
[4] Fiona Stanley Hosp, Dept Intens Care Med, Murdoch, WA, Australia
关键词
Dysbiosis; infection; microbiome; probiotics; synbiotics; TRIMETHYLAMINE-N-OXIDE; CHAIN FATTY-ACIDS; DOUBLE-BLIND; INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA; ENTERAL NUTRITION; HELICOBACTER-PYLORI; COLORECTAL SURGERY; GENE-EXPRESSION; MONOOXYGENASE; PROBIOTICS;
D O I
10.1177/0310057X20903732
中图分类号
R614 [麻醉学];
学科分类号
100217 ;
摘要
Microbiota-defined as a collection of microbial organisms colonising different parts of the human body-is now recognised as a pivotal element of human health, and explains a large part of the variance in the phenotypic expression of many diseases. A reduction in microbiota diversity, and replacement of normal microbes with non-commensal, pathogenic or more virulent microbes in the gastrointestinal tract-also known as gut dysbiosis-is now considered to play a causal role in the pathogenesis of many acute and chronic diseases. Results from animal and human studies suggest that dysbiosis is linked to cardiovascular and metabolic disease through changes to microbiota-derived metabolites, including trimethylamine-N-oxide and short-chain fatty acids. Dysbiosis can occur within hours of surgery or the onset of critical illness, even without the administration of antibiotics. These pathological changes in microbiota may contribute to important clinical outcomes, including surgical infection, bowel anastomotic leaks, acute kidney injury, respiratory failure and brain injury. As a strategy to reduce dysbiosis, the use of probiotics (live bacterial cultures that confer health benefits) or synbiotics (probiotic in combination with food that encourages the growth of gut commensal bacteria) in surgical and critically ill patients has been increasingly reported to confer important clinical benefits, including a reduction in ventilator-associated pneumonia, bacteraemia and length of hospital stay, in small randomised controlled trials. However, the best strategy to modulate dysbiosis or counteract its potential harms remains uncertain and requires investigation by a well-designed, adequately powered, randomised controlled trial.
引用
收藏
页码:179 / 195
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The microbiome of the critically ill patient
    Akrami, Kevan
    Sweeney, Daniel A.
    CURRENT OPINION IN CRITICAL CARE, 2018, 24 (01) : 49 - 54
  • [32] Rescue fecal microbiota transplantation for antibiotic-associated diarrhea in critically ill patients
    Dai, Min
    Liu, Yafei
    Chen, Wei
    Buch, Heena
    Shan, Yi
    Chang, Liuhui
    Bai, Yong
    Shen, Chen
    Zhang, Xiaoyin
    Huo, Yufeng
    Huang, Dian
    Yang, Zhou
    Hu, Zhihang
    He, Xuwei
    Pan, Junyu
    Hu, Lili
    Pan, Xinfang
    Wu, Xiangtao
    Deng, Bin
    Li, Zhifeng
    Cui, Bota
    Zhang, Faming
    CRITICAL CARE, 2019, 23 (01):
  • [33] Synbiotics and the mucosal barrier in critically ill patients
    Bengmark, S
    CURRENT OPINION IN GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2005, 21 (06) : 712 - 716
  • [34] Safety, feasibility, and impact on the gut microbiome of kefir administration in critically ill adults
    Gupta, Vinod K.
    Rajendraprasad, Sanu
    Ozkan, Mahmut
    Ramachandran, Dhanya
    Ahmad, Sumera
    Bakken, Johan S.
    Laudanski, Krzysztof
    Gajic, Ognjen
    Bauer, Brent
    Zec, Simon
    Freeman, David W.
    Khanna, Sahil
    Shah, Aditya
    Skalski, Joseph H.
    Sung, Jaeyun
    Karnatovskaia, Lioudmila V.
    BMC MEDICINE, 2024, 22 (01)
  • [35] Impact of Gut Microbiota Composition on Onset and Progression of Chronic Non-Communicable Diseases
    Noce, Annalisa
    Marrone, Giulia
    Di Daniele, Francesca
    Ottaviani, Eleonora
    Jones, Georgia Wilson
    Bernini, Roberta
    Romani, Annalisa
    Rovella, Valentina
    NUTRIENTS, 2019, 11 (05)
  • [36] Importance of intestinal microbiota in critically ill patients and possibilities of its influence
    Cibulkova, I
    Rehorova, V
    Duska, F.
    ANESTEZIOLOGIE A INTENZIVNI MEDICINA, 2022, 33 (01): : 32 - 38
  • [37] Human gut microbiota/microbiome in health and diseases: a review
    Gomaa, Eman Zakaria
    ANTONIE VAN LEEUWENHOEK INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GENERAL AND MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 2020, 113 (12): : 2019 - 2040
  • [38] The role of gut microbiota in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome
    Leylabadlo, Hamed Ebrahimzadeh
    Heravi, Fatemah Sadeghpour
    Soltani, Elghar
    Abbasi, Amin
    Kafil, Hossein Samadi
    Parsaei, Mahdi
    Sanaie, Sarvin
    Ahmadian, Zainab
    Ghotaslou, Reza
    REVIEWS AND RESEARCH IN MEDICAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2022, 33 (01): : E89 - E104
  • [39] The gut microbiota composition is linked to subsequent occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia in critically ill patients
    Orieux, Arthur
    Enaud, Raphael
    Imbert, Sebastien
    Boyer, Philippe
    Begot, Erwan
    Camino, Adrian
    Boyer, Alexandre
    Berger, Patrick
    Gruson, Didier
    Delhaes, Laurence
    Prevel, Renaud
    MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM, 2023, 11 (05):