Narrative review on COVID-19 and gut microbiome disruption and immune effects
This is a narrative review on COVID-19 and the intestinal microbiome. The scope covers how SARS-CoV-2 infection relates to microbiome disruption, potential roles for probiotics, prebiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation, and implications for immune and neuropsychiatric outcomes.
The authors synthesize that SARS-CoV-2 infection can induce intestinal dysbiosis and modify immune signaling. They note that neuropsychiatric and metabolic complications may be affected by the microbiota-gut-brain axis. No pooled effect sizes or quantitative results are reported.
Key limitations noted include the lack of reported effect sizes, absolute numbers, p-values, or confidence intervals for the synthesized findings. The review does not report a defined study population, sample size, or follow-up period.
Practice relevance is framed as integrating microbiome research into pandemic preparedness through a One Health approach. The authors do not report safety data or causality assessments, and the evidence remains observational and preliminary.