The Record (Troy, NY)

Probiotics might lessen symptoms of depression

- Ask the Doctors

DEARDOCTOR » It seems like you can’t go a day without probiotics turning out to be the cure for some ailment or another. Now we’re being told they help depression. How can that be?

DEARREADER » We agree with you that probiotics are in the news quite a bit these days, and sometimes with more than a bit of hyperbole. Much of the news comes from legitimate scientific research now being done into the fascinatin­g world of the gut biome. Having read many of the resulting papers, we can assure you that the researcher­s themselves are far more temperate and restrained in their findings than some headline writers, who seem to love the idea of a medicalmir­acle.

Probiotics are live micro- organisms that are ingested for their health benefits. Found in yogurt, kefir and other fermented foods, as well as in dietary supplement­s, they live in our digestive tracts, particular­ly in the gut. There, they are believed to enhance immune function and inhibit the growth of pathogens.

The spate of recent news reports drawing a link between probiotics and depression relief are likely coming from the results of a study published last spring in the journal Gastroente­rology. Researcher­s in Canada followed 44 adults with irritable bowel syndrome, or IBS, a bowel disorder. IBS causes abdominal pain and diarrhea or constipati­on, and there is evidence that probiotics can ease some of those symptoms. The subjects in this study also suffered from mild or moderate anxiety and depression, which can be common among people with IBS.

Half of the people in the study were given a certain strain of probiotic, and the other half received a placebo. At the sixweek mark of the study, 64 percent of the patients taking the probiotic saw a decrease in test scores that rate depression. The placebo group’s depression scores dropped half that amount, or 32 percent. Interestin­gly, the rate of anxiety in both groups remained the same. A final evaluation at the end of the 10week study yielded the same results.

If you’re wondering whether the depression lessened because the probiotic group felt better physically, you’re not alone. But researcher­s also performed brain scans on the test subjects. The results of those scans led them to conclude that the probiotic reduced depression by changing brain activation patterns, specifical­ly in the limbic system, which is the collection of structures in the brain associated with emotion and memory.

This research follows on the heels of a handful of other studies in recent years that suggest probiotics can alleviate the symptoms of depression. The thinking is this occurs because probiotics reduce gut inflammati­on, while simultaneo­usly raising serotonin levels. There’s even a great name for this emerging area of study — the gut- brain axis. Communicat­ion goes both ways — from gut to brain and from brain to gut — via the nervous system, glands and hormones, and the immune system.

Thus far, studies into probiotics and depression have been small and brief, involving limited strains of probiotics. As researcher­s create larger, well- controlled and long- term studies that investigat­e multiple probiotic strains, the results should be fascinatin­g.

 ??  ?? Eve Glazier + Elizabeth Ko
Eve Glazier + Elizabeth Ko

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