Alzheimer's: Gut bacteria may travel to the brain, worsening disease

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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In search for more treatments for Alzheimer’s, researchers are investigating the potential role played by bacterial infections in this disease, using mouse models. Image credit: Maskot/Getty Images
  • Klebsiella pneumoniae is a bacterium found in a person’s gut microbiome and feces.
  • If K. pneumoniae travels to other areas of the body, it can cause a number of serious medical conditions.
  • Researchers from Florida State University believe there may also be a connection between K. pneumoniae that enters the brain and the progression of Alzheimer’s disease, via a mouse study.

Klebsiella pneumoniae is one of the trillions of bacteria found within a person’s gut microbiome and feces. If this type of bacteria travels to any other areas of the body, it can cause a number of conditions including pneumonia, meningitis, urinary tract infections (UTIs), and wound and blood infections.

People in hospitals or other healthcare settings are at the greatest risk of acquiring an infection with K. pneumoniae.

Now, researchers from Florida State University report in a new study recently published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases that there may also be a connection between K. pneumoniae that enters the brain and the progression of a type of dementia known as Alzheimer’s disease.

For this study, researchers used a mouse model of Alzheimer’s disease infected with K. pneumoniae.

During the study, scientists found that when the mice were exposed to antibiotics, the diversity of their gut bacteria depleted, causing a microbiome imbalance.

This then allowed K. pneumoniae to migrate from the gut into the bloodstream by passing through the gut lining.

From there, the bacteria traveled into the brain, causing neuroinflammation and neurocognitive impairment, both of which are known Alzheimer’s disease symptoms.

These findings, researchers say, emphasizes the possible risk hospital-acquired infections like K. pneumoniae might cause in the development of neurodegenerative diseases.

In a press release, Ravinder Nagpal, PhD, an assistant professor in the College of Education, Health, and Human Sciences and the director of the Gut Biome Lab at Florida State University and one of the authors of this study, noted that:

“Hospitalizations and ICU stays, combined with antibiotic exposure, may lead to a further decline in microbiome diversity that leaves older adults at high risk not only for digestive issues but also for extra-intestinal pathologies, such as neurodegenerative disorders, through a dysregulation of the gut-brain axis.”

The researchers believe their findings may also open the door to new therapies for Alzheimer’s disease.

MNT also spoke with Ashkan Farhadi, MD, a board-certified gastroenterologist at MemorialCare Orange Coast Medical Center in Fountain Valley, CA, about this study.

Farhadi, who was not involved in the research, commented that while the title of the study was intriguing, and there were interesting and positive aspects of the study, the substance of the study was not as comprehensive as it could have been.

“[The authors] are just making some statements that are really broad — much broader than the finding,” he suggested.

“[They] are claiming that the gut bacteria can get from here to there, while they only showed one possible gut bacteria in a setting of antibiotic got into the bloodstream, which is good, and we knew that. When a patient is exposed to antibiotics, you can get an infection because the gut barrier gets disrupted,” explained Farhadi.

“They also showed that when the blood gets infected, we thought the blood-brain barrier [was] going to protect the invasion of the bacteria to the brain, but that also was not true, as this bacteria passed that barrier as well and got into [the] brain,” he continued.

“We always knew that during sepsis or infection in the blood, we are having septic encephalopathy, which means the brain may not function properly during sepsis. But this shows that actually we are having encephalitis because of the infection — that’s not unheard of. It is very interesting that the authors put together a narrative that we already knew pieces and parcels of, but put it in a narrative that put everything in one perspective”

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