Narrative review explores psychobiotics and lifestyle changes for chronic constipation-depression comorbidity
This narrative review synthesizes current knowledge regarding the management of chronic constipation and depression comorbidity. The scope encompasses a range of interventions, including psychobiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, dietary modifications such as the Mediterranean diet and high-fiber intake, exercise, and traditional Chinese medicine. The authors highlight that gut dysbiosis is associated with this comorbidity and may contribute to its pathogenesis through multiple mechanisms. Consequently, microbiota-targeted therapies offer promising strategies for managing this condition.
The authors acknowledge significant limitations in the existing evidence base. They state that future research should establish causal relationships and develop reliable microbial biomarkers. Additionally, precision medicine approaches based on individual microbiome profiles are needed to optimize therapeutic outcomes. The review does not provide specific numerical outcomes, absolute numbers, or event rates, as these details are not reported in the source material.
In terms of practice relevance, the authors conclude that microbiota-targeted therapies offer promising strategies for managing chronic constipation-depression comorbidity. However, clinicians should interpret these findings cautiously given the lack of randomized controlled trial data and the need for further validation. The review serves as a qualitative synthesis rather than a quantitative meta-analysis, limiting the ability to draw definitive clinical conclusions regarding efficacy or safety.