The gut-brain axis: historical reflections.

Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease Pub Date : 2018-11-08 eCollection Date: 2018-01-01 DOI:10.1080/16512235.2018.1542921
Ian Miller
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Abstract

The gut-brain axis and the microbiome have recently acquired an important position in explaining a wide range of human behaviours and emotions. Researchers have typically presented developments in understandings of the microbiome as radical and new, offering huge potential for better understandings of our bodies and what it means to be human. Without refuting the value of this research, this article insists that, traditionally, doctors and patients acknowledged the complex interactions between their guts and emotions, although using alternative models often based on nerves or psychology. For example, nineteenth-century doctors and patients would have been well acquainted with the idea that their stomachs and minds were somehow connected, and that this interaction could produce positive or negative physical and mental health impacts. To demonstrate this, this article offers a snapshot of medical and public thought on (what we currently call) the gut-brain axis in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, using Britain as a key case study due to the prevalence of gastric problems in that country. It commences by exploring how nineteenth-century doctors and patients took for granted the intimate relations between gut and mind and used their ideas on this to debate personal health, medical theory and social and political discourse. The article then moves on to argue that various medical sub-disciplines emerged (anatomy, physiology, surgery) that threatened to reduce the stomach to a physiologically complex organ but, in doing so, inadvertently began to erase ideas of a gut-mind connection. However, these new models proved unsatisfactory, allowing more holistic ideas of the body-mind relationship to continue to carry currency in twentieth-century psychological and medical thought. In the late century, pharmacological developments once again threatened to minimise the gut-brain axis, before it once again became popular in the early twenty-first century, now debated through a new language of microbiology.

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肠脑轴:历史反思。
肠脑轴和微生物组最近在解释人类的广泛行为和情绪方面占据了重要地位。研究人员通常认为,对微生物组的理解是全新的,这为更好地理解我们的身体以及作为人类意味着什么提供了巨大的潜力。在没有反驳这项研究的价值的情况下,这篇文章坚持认为,传统上,医生和患者承认他们的肠道和情绪之间的复杂互动,尽管使用的是通常基于神经或心理学的替代模型。例如,19世纪的医生和患者会很清楚他们的胃和思想在某种程度上是相连的,这种互动可能会对身心健康产生积极或消极的影响。为了证明这一点,这篇文章简要介绍了19世纪和20世纪医学和公众对(我们目前称之为)肠脑轴的看法,并将英国作为一个关键案例研究,因为该国胃问题普遍存在。它首先探讨了19世纪的医生和患者如何认为肠道和心灵之间的亲密关系是理所当然的,并利用他们在这方面的想法来辩论个人健康、医学理论以及社会和政治话语。文章接着指出,出现了各种医学子学科(解剖学、生理学、外科学),这些学科有可能将胃简化为一个生理上复杂的器官,但在这样做的过程中,无意中开始抹去肠与心之间的联系。然而,这些新的模型被证明是不令人满意的,使更全面的身心关系思想在20世纪的心理学和医学思想中继续流行。在21世纪初再次流行之前,药理学的发展再次威胁到肠脑轴的最小化,现在通过一种新的微生物学语言进行了辩论。
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