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Changes in Gut Bacteria May Activate Brain Immune Cells and Relate to Pain in Bladder Pain Syndrome

Updated

Abstract

Essence

IC/BPS patient stool-derived microbiota triggered inflammatory microglial responses that tracked with reported pain scores.

Evidence

In vitro culture experiments exposed BV2 cells, enriched primary microglia, and mixed glial cultures to heat-killed stool-derived microbiota from IC/BPS patients and controls, measuring TNF-alpha, RANTES/CCL5, and IL-6 by ELISA.

Caveat

The evidence comes from cell culture responses to heat-killed microbiota, so it does not show that gut dysbiosis causes microglial activation or pain in patients.

Simplified

Full Text

Full text is available at the source.

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