Gut microbiota, liver disease, and perioperative anesthesia: interactions, risks, and therapeutic opportunities
Lei Shi, Ye Yu, Zihan Ma, Weiyi Jiang

TL;DR
This paper explores how gut microbiota influences liver disease and anesthesia outcomes, offering new strategies to improve surgical care for affected patients.
Contribution
Introduces the gut-liver-anesthesia axis as a novel framework for understanding perioperative risks in liver disease.
Findings
Gut microbiome disturbances increase perioperative risks like infection and delirium in liver disease patients.
Anesthetic agents can disrupt gut integrity and alter drug metabolism through microbiome interactions.
Microbiome-focused strategies may improve postoperative outcomes in patients with liver disease.
Abstract
Liver disease is increasingly common worldwide and poses significant challenges during anesthesia and surgery. Growing evidence demonstrates that the gut microbiome plays an essential role in hepatic inflammation, metabolic imbalance, immune dysfunction, and the progression of conditions such as metabolic associated steatotic liver disease, alcohol related liver injury, and cirrhosis. This review summarizes the concept of the gut-liver-anesthesia axis, which describes how disturbances in the intestinal microbiome shape perioperative risk. Importantly, this framework conceptualizes the gut-liver-anesthesia axis as a unified perioperative risk model, integrating microbial dysbiosis, hepatic vulnerability, and anesthetic exposure into a single pathophysiological continuum. Patients with advanced liver disease frequently exhibit reduced microbial diversity, impaired intestinal barrier…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
Click any figure to enlarge with its caption.
Figure 1
Figure 2Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Clinical Nutrition and Gastroenterology · Enhanced Recovery After Surgery
