肠道思维:超越头脑的肠道微生物组和心理健康。

Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease Pub Date : 2018-11-30 eCollection Date: 2018-01-01 DOI:10.1080/16512235.2018.1548250
Grace Lucas
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:近几十年来,主要的精神疾病模型越来越关注头部,精神障碍被认为是大脑障碍。然而,对微生物组-肠-脑轴在影响情绪和行为方面发挥的积极作用的研究可能会得出这样的结论,即心理健康不仅仅是个体大脑的内在问题。目的:本文探讨了通过研究肠道微生物组与抑郁和焦虑等心理健康问题之间的联系,人们对心理健康的理解发生了转变。它旨在分析这项研究以不同的方式重塑身心和身心健康之间的界限,这项研究开始为临床和公众的理解提供信息。设计:随着心理健康成为政治和公众关注的一个紧迫问题,它越来越多地从社会文化和个人角度构建,超出了临床空间,需要超越生物医学调查的概念回应。本文认为,跨学科的批判性医学人文方法非常适合分析微生物组-肠-脑研究对心智概念的影响。结果:微生物组-肠-脑轴研究表明,精神和物质的纠缠可能为概念化精神痛苦的身体和社会伴随因素提供了一种不同的方式。结论:心理健康并不局限于大脑,而是被身体吸收并与自然世界融为一体,需要不同的研究方法来揭示肠道思维对人类自我概念的意义和含义。
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Gut thinking: the gut microbiome and mental health beyond the head.

Background: In recent decades, dominant models of mental illness have become increasingly focused on the head, with mental disorders being figured as brain disorders. However, research into the active role that the microbiome-gut-brain axis plays in affecting mood and behaviour may lead to the conclusion that mental health is more than an internalised problem of individual brains. Objective: This article explores the implications of shifting understandings about mental health that have come about through research into links between the gut microbiome and mental health problems such as depression and anxiety. It aims to analyse the different ways that the lines between mind and body and mental and physical health are re-shaped by this research, which is starting to inform clinical and public understanding. Design: As mental health has become a pressing issue of political and public concern it has become increasingly constructed in socio-cultural and personal terms beyond clinical spaces, requiring a conceptual response that exceeds biomedical inquiry. This article argues that an interdisciplinary critical medical humanities approach is well positioned to analyse the impact of microbiome-gut-brain research on conceptions of mind. Results: The entanglement of mind and matter evinced by microbiome-gut-brain axis research potentially provides a different way to conceptualise the physical and social concomitants of mental distress. Conclusion: Mental health is not narrowly located in the head but is assimilated by the physical body and intermingled with the natural world, requiring different methods of research to unfold the meanings and implications of gut thinking for conceptions of human selfhood.

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