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Narrative review explores gut microbiota role in postoperative delirium in liver disease

Narrative review explores gut microbiota role in postoperative delirium in liver disease
Photo by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Recognize that gut microbiota's role in postoperative delirium remains hypothesis-generating; no practice changes are supported.

This is a narrative review that explores the relationship between gut microbiota alterations and postoperative delirium in older surgical patients with liver disease. The authors discuss perioperative anesthetic factors and interventions that may influence gut microbiota and delirium risk. However, the review does not report a systematic search strategy or pooled effect sizes, and the evidence base is described as limited and heterogeneous.

The key findings are qualitative: gut microbiota changes may be associated with postoperative delirium, but the evidence is largely hypothesis-generating. The authors note that current evidence does not distinguish association from causation, and direct translation to clinical practice is not yet supported.

Limitations acknowledged include the heterogeneity of available studies and the lack of definitive clinical recommendations. The review does not report sample sizes, comparators, primary outcomes, or adverse events, reflecting the early stage of this research area.

For clinicians, this review highlights a potential mechanistic pathway but underscores that no practice changes are warranted based on current evidence. Further rigorous research is needed before any clinical application.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Postoperative delirium (POD) is a prevalent and clinically significant complication among older surgical patients. Despite its high incidence, the underlying pathogenesis remains incompletely understood, and effective targeted therapeutic strategies are lacking. As the largest microecosystem in the human body, the gut microbiota has been increasingly recognized for its potential role in modulating central nervous system (CNS) function and systemic inflammatory responses through the gut–brain and gut–liver axes. Accumulating evidence suggests that alterations in gut microbial composition (gut dysbiosis) may be associated with the initiation and progression of POD. Patients with pre-existing liver disease appear to be particularly vulnerable, possibly due to baseline disturbances in gut microbiota, impaired intestinal barrier function, and systemic immune dysregulation. In addition, exposure to anesthetic agents and the physiological stress of surgery may further perturb intestinal microecology, potentially contributing to a self-reinforcing cycle within a proposed gut-liver-anesthesia axis. In this narrative review, we provide a targeted synthesis of current mechanistic and clinical evidence linking the gut microbiota to POD. We further explore the potential interactions among gut dysbiosis, liver dysfunction, and perioperative anesthetic factors, with a focus on their implications for neurocognitive outcomes. Finally, we summarize emerging microbiota-targeted perioperative interventions, while emphasizing that the current evidence remains limited, heterogeneous, and largely hypothesis-generating rather than directly translatable to clinical practice.
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