"Breakthrough Study Links Gut Microbiota to Social Anxiety Disorder Treatment"

TL;DR Summary
Researchers have discovered a link between the gut microbiome and social anxiety disorder (SAD). A study from University College Cork found that mice receiving gut microbes from humans with SAD exhibited more social fear after conditioning with electric shocks compared to mice with microbes from non-anxious individuals. The study also noted lower levels of social hormones and changes in immune response in the SAD microbiome mice, suggesting that the gut-brain axis plays a significant role in mental health and could lead to new treatments for conditions like social anxiety.
Topics:health##gutbrainaxis#gutmicrobiome#health-and-science#mentalhealth#microbiomeresearch#socialanxiety
- Scientists Identified A Strange Connection Between Our Gut Microbes and Anxiety Inverse
- Social anxiety disorder-associated gut microbiota increases social fear | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences pnas.org
- Gut microbes may play role in social anxiety disorder, say researchers The Guardian
- Here's What Happened Today: Wednesday · TheJournal.ie TheJournal.ie
- Cork researchers make 'significant breakthrough' for the treatment of Social Anxiety Disorder EchoLive.ie
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