Integrating Gut Microbiota and Violence Exposure Metrics to Classify Psychological Distress in Middle-Aged Adults
Khalil Iktilat, Gali Levin, Sondra Turjeman, Roy Tzemah-Shahar, Yoram Louzoun, Omry Koren, Maayan Agmon

TL;DR
This study shows that gut microbiota and violence exposure can help identify middle-aged adults at risk for psychological distress.
Contribution
The study identifies unique microbial signatures linked to violence exposure and distress, and uses them for classification.
Findings
Unique microbial signatures were associated with increasing violence exposure and distress.
Machine learning classified participants into high- and low-distress groups with 63% accuracy.
Many correlations between specific bacteria and distress were novel, such as Desulfovibrio.
Abstract
The link between violence exposure and psychological distress is well established. The study of microbiota-gut-brain crosstalk shows that the relationships between microbiota and environmental stressors are bidirectional and play a causative role in host mental state. We explored how the microbiota in a population at the onset of aging relates to violence exposure and distress levels and determined that the microbiota and exposure to violence can be used to classify patients into high- and low-distress groups. Bioinformatics and modeling were completed, underscoring the significant impact of the microbiome on violence-distress relationships and highlighting the importance of our contribution to ongoing research. We first characterized fecal microbiota of Israeli-Muslims (n = 305) aged 50.82±6.94 (40-65yrs) exposed to increasing violence in the past decade and examined correlations with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Tryptophan and brain disorders · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research
