Medical Sciences, Vol. 13, Pages 236: Gut–Brain Axis and Perioperative Gut Microbiome in Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction: Implications for Neurosurgical Patients


Medical Sciences, Vol. 13, Pages 236: Gut–Brain Axis and Perioperative Gut Microbiome in Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction: Implications for Neurosurgical Patients

Medical Sciences doi: 10.3390/medsci13040236

Authors:
Ismail A. Abdullah
Sariya Khan
Fatma E. Hassan

Background: Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a common postoperative condition after neurosurgery, and in patients of advancing age, with far-reaching implications for recovery and quality of life. Current evidence points to the gut–brain axis as the main mechanism for the regulation of perioperative neuroinflammation and cognition. Objective: The aim of this review is to consolidate the existing evidence for perioperative gut microbiome dysbiosis in POCD, specifically in neurosurgical patients. Methods: A review of preclinical and clinical evidence on the gut microbiome, surgical stress, and cognitive recovery was conducted. Both mechanistic and therapeutic evidence were examined. Results: Surgery and anesthesia enhance gut microbial diversity, intestinal permeability, and systemic inflammation, thereby compromising neuroplasticity and the integrity of blood–brain barriers. Preclinical models show that interventions to reestablish microbial homeostasis with probiotics, prebiotics, or fecal microbiota transplantation decrease postoperative cognition. Clinical studies offer evidence supporting the associations between decreased short-chain fatty acid-producing bacteria and POCD risk. Randomized controlled trials have demonstrated that perioperative probiotics lower the incidence and markers of POCD. Multi-omic approaches to integrating microbiome, metabolome, and neuroimaging signatures are being engineered to discern recovery phenotypes prior to surgery. Conclusions: Perioperative gut microbiota are a modifiable target for the optimization of cognitive recovery from neurosurgery. The inclusion of microbiome treatments and diagnostics into standard surgical care pathways is one potential pathway to POCD minimization, but large randomized trials will be necessary to establish this.



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Ismail A. Abdullah www.mdpi.com