TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY, THE GUT MICROBIOME, AND SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS: A REVIEW

D. Spyropoulos
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Abstract

This article reviews existing literature on three bidirectional relationships. These are traumatic brain injury (TBI) and gut microbiome relationship, the TBI and socioeconomic status (SES) relationship, and the gut microbiome and SES relationship. Literature on the relationship between TBIs and the gut microbiome underscores the loop created through the gut-brain axis, leading TBI to disrupt gut microbiota composition and diversity, which in turn aggravate existing neuroinflammation in the brain. Literature on the relationship between TBIs and SES links lower SES to higher occurrence rates of TBI and poorer recovery outcomes. Literature on the relationship between the gut microbiome and SES, links lower SES to gut dysbiosis, presenting as imbalanced gut microbiota composition and lower diversity. The TBI-gut microbiome, TBI-SES, and gut microbiome-SES bidirectional relationships reinforce health inequity and call for social justice advocacy for the protection of brain health of people of lower socioeconomic backgrounds.
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创伤性脑损伤、肠道微生物群和社会经济地位:综述
本文对三种双向关系的现有文献进行了综述。分别是创伤性脑损伤(TBI)与肠道微生物群的关系、创伤性脑损伤与社会经济地位(SES)的关系以及肠道微生物群与社会经济地位(SES)的关系。关于创伤性脑损伤与肠道微生物组之间关系的文献强调了通过肠-脑轴形成的循环,导致创伤性脑损伤破坏肠道微生物群的组成和多样性,从而加剧了大脑中现有的神经炎症。关于TBI和SES之间关系的文献表明,较低的SES与较高的TBI发生率和较差的恢复结果有关。关于肠道微生物组与SES之间关系的文献将SES降低与肠道生态失调联系起来,表现为肠道微生物群组成失衡和多样性降低。tbi -肠道微生物组、TBI-SES和肠道微生物组- ses的双向关系加剧了健康不平等,并呼吁社会正义倡导保护社会经济背景较低人群的大脑健康。
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