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eng
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Original Article
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Description
Although electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an effective treatment for schizophrenia, the treatment response rate is only approximately 50%. In addition, it is not clear what the optimal conditions are for maximizing ECT responsiveness. Meanwhile, an association between gut microbiota and the pathophysiology of schizophrenia has recently been reported. Therefore, we explored whether gut microbiota might predict the therapeutic efficacy of ECT. We examined the bacterial percentage of the gut microbiota of 11 patients with schizophrenia who received ECT treatment. Linear regression analyses showed that high Bifidobacterium and low Lactobacillus levels in stools before ECT were associated with a decrease in symptom severity, as measured by the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, after ECT. No bacteria showed significant changes in proportion before and after ECT. Our results suggest that Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus levels could predict the responsiveness to ECT but not changes in the severity of schizophrenia.
Subject
ECT
gut microbiota
schizophrenia
Bifidobacterium
Lactobacillus
Journal Title
Shimane Journal of Medical Science
Volume
41
Issue
3
Start Page
83
End Page
91
ISSN
03865959
ISSN(Online)
24332410
Published Date
2024-09
NCID
AA00841586
DOI
Publisher
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
Publisher Aalternative
島根大学医学部
NII Type
Departmental Bulletin Paper
Format
PDF
Rights
Faculty of Medicine, Shimane University
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出版社版
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Faculty of Medicine
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