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Intestinal dysbiosis and permeability: the yin and yang in alcohol dependence and alcoholic liver disease.

Author
Abstract
:

Alcohol dependence and alcoholic liver disease represent a major public health problem with substantial morbidity and mortality. By yet incompletely understood mechanisms, chronic alcohol abuse is associated with increased intestinal permeability and alterations of the gut microbiota composition, allowing bacterial components, bacteria, and metabolites to reach the portal and the systemic circulation. These gut-derived bacterial products are recognized by immune cells circulating in the blood or residing in remote organs such as the liver leading to the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines which are considered important mediators of the liver-gut-brain communication. Although circulating cytokines are likely not the sole factors involved, they can induce liver inflammation/damage and reach the central nervous system where they favor neuroinflammation which is associated with change in mood, cognition, and drinking behavior. In this review, the authors focus on the current evidence describing the changes that occur in the intestinal microbiota with chronic alcohol consumption in conjunction with intestinal barrier breakdown and inflammatory changes sustaining the concept of a gut-liver-brain axis in the pathophysiology of alcohol dependence and alcoholic liver disease.

Year of Publication
:
2018
Journal
:
Clinical science (London, England : 1979)
Volume
:
132
Issue
:
2
Number of Pages
:
199-212
Date Published
:
2018
ISSN Number
:
0143-5221
URL
:
http://clinsci.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=long&pmid=29352076
DOI
:
10.1042/CS20171055
Short Title
:
Clin Sci (Lond)
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