Two Problems That Keep Showing Up Together
Chronic constipation and depression are both extremely common. Constipation affects roughly 16% of adults globally, and depression is one of the leading causes of disability worldwide. But what surprises many people is how often they show up in the same person, at the same time.
This isn't a coincidence. Researchers reviewing the latest science on the microbiota-gut-brain axis (MGB axis) — the two-way communication system between your digestive tract and your brain — have found compelling evidence that gut bacteria imbalances may be driving both conditions simultaneously.
The Old Way of Thinking
For most of medical history, constipation and depression were treated as completely unrelated problems. A gastroenterologist (gut doctor) would address one, a psychiatrist might address the other, and rarely would the two talk to each other.
But here's the twist: researchers now understand that the gut and the brain are in constant conversation, and disrupting that conversation affects both ends.
A Two-Way Highway Between Gut and Brain
The MGB axis works through four main pathways — think of it as a highway system with four lanes.
The first lane is the vagus nerve, a long nerve that runs from the brainstem down to the gut and carries signals in both directions. The second is the immune system — gut bacteria help regulate inflammation, and chronic inflammation can affect mood. The third is the hormonal lane: the HPA axis (the body's stress-response system) is influenced by gut bacteria. The fourth involves chemical messengers like serotonin (the "feel-good" chemical) and short-chain fatty acids produced when gut bacteria break down fiber.
About 90% of the body's serotonin is actually made in the gut, not the brain. When gut bacteria are disrupted, serotonin production can falter — affecting both gut movement and emotional regulation.
What Goes Wrong in Both Conditions
In people with both constipation and depression, researchers have identified a consistent pattern of gut changes. The diversity of bacterial species drops significantly. Beneficial bacteria — especially those that produce butyrate (BYOO-tih-rate), a fatty acid that feeds the gut lining — become depleted. These include bacteria like Faecalibacterium and Roseburia.
At the same time, pro-inflammatory bacteria increase. The gut lining becomes more "leaky," allowing bacterial products to enter the bloodstream and trigger low-grade inflammation. That inflammation reaches the brain and can worsen depression.
This doesn't mean gut problems cause depression in every case — but for many people, the two conditions may be feeding each other in a vicious cycle.
The Study Behind the Summary
This was a narrative review — not a clinical trial. Researchers systematically gathered and analyzed existing studies on the gut-brain axis, gut bacteria changes in people with both conditions, and potential treatments. This type of review is valuable for building a comprehensive picture, but it doesn't prove cause and effect on its own.
What Researchers Found Most Promising
Several approaches show real promise for breaking the cycle. Psychobiotics — specific probiotic strains that may influence mental health — are among the most actively studied. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), which involves transferring healthy gut bacteria from a donor, has shown early results in both constipation and depression treatment. Dietary changes, especially the Mediterranean diet and high-fiber eating, appear to support both gut and mental health. Regular exercise also emerged as a consistent positive factor.
Traditional Chinese medicine approaches showed beneficial effects in some studies, though the evidence base is less robust.
If you are living with both depression and chronic constipation, this research suggests asking your doctor about the gut-brain connection. You don't need to self-diagnose or order your own tests. But a conversation about diet, probiotics, or a referral to a gastroenterologist who communicates with your mental health provider could be valuable.
None of these treatments are ready to replace standard depression or constipation care. They are additions to consider, not replacements.
The Honest Limitations
This review covers a fast-moving field, and many of the studies it draws on are small or short-term. Researchers acknowledge that we don't yet have solid proof of which direction the relationship runs — does gut dysbiosis (DIS-by-OH-sis, meaning bacterial imbalance) cause depression, or does depression alter the gut? The answer is likely "both," but we need more rigorous clinical trials to confirm.
What Comes Next
Researchers are calling for larger randomized trials, reliable microbial biomarkers (measurable signs in gut bacteria that can guide treatment), and personalized medicine approaches that match specific bacterial profiles to specific therapies. The goal is a future where your doctor can look at your gut bacteria and choose a treatment plan tailored specifically to your microbiome — not just your symptoms.