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Gut microbiota in alcohol-related liver disease: pathophysiology and gut-brain cross talk

Affiliation
Center of Liver Diseases Division 3 ,Beijing Ditan Hospital ,Capital Medical University ,Beijing ,China
Zhu, Lin;
Affiliation
Division of Gastroenterology and Hepatology ,BaoJi Central Hospital ,Shaanxi ,China
Wang, Yixuan;
Affiliation
Center of Liver Diseases Division 3 ,Beijing Ditan Hospital ,Capital Medical University ,Beijing ,China
Pan, Calvin Q.;
Affiliation
Center of Liver Diseases Division 3 ,Beijing Ditan Hospital ,Capital Medical University ,Beijing ,China
Xing, Huichun

Alcohol-related liver disease (ALD) from excessive alcohol intake has a unique gut microbiota profile. The disease progression-free survival in ALD patients has been associated with the degree of gut dysbiosis. The vicious cycles between gut dysbiosis and the disease progression in ALD including: an increase of acetaldehyde production and bile acid secretion, impaired gut barrier, enrichment of circulating microbiota, toxicities of microbiota metabolites, a cascade of pro-inflammatory chemokines or cytokines, and augmentation in the generation of reactive oxygen species. The aforementioned pathophysiology process plays an important role in different disease stages with a spectrum of alcohol hepatitis, ALD cirrhosis, neurological dysfunction, and hepatocellular carcinoma. This review aims to illustrate the pathophysiology of gut microbiota and clarify the gut-brain crosstalk in ALD, which may provide the opportunity of identifying target points for future therapeutic intervention in ALD.

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License Holder: Copyright © 2023 Zhu, Wang, Pan and Xing.

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