Neuropsychiatric Disorders and Constipation: Unraveling Causal Links Through Genetic Analysis
Guojie Zhao, Haixia Ren, Yi Zhang, Zhi Wang, Qiao Yang, Shuang Liu, Minzhen Li, Zhiyu Xiang, Jingwen Liu

TL;DR
This study finds a bidirectional causal link between anxiety, depression, and constipation, suggesting that managing constipation could improve mental health outcomes.
Contribution
The study uses bidirectional Mendelian randomization to establish causal relationships between neuropsychiatric disorders and constipation.
Findings
Anxiety and depression increase the risk of constipation.
Constipation increases the risk of anxiety, depression, epilepsy, and trigeminal neuralgia.
No pleiotropy or heterogeneity was observed in the MR analysis.
Abstract
Numerous observational studies have suggested a relationship between neuropsychiatric disorders and constipation. However, the specific causal relationships remain unclear. Mendelian randomization (MR) serves as a proven strategy for examining the causal relationships between genetic exposures and outcomes. In the present study, we used a two‐sample Mendelian randomization (TSMR) analysis to thoroughly explore the potential bidirectional genetic causal effects between neuropsychiatric disorders and constipation. We utilized the R11 data from Finnish genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) to examine the association between twelve common neuropsychiatric disorders and constipation using TSMR analysis. To establish this causal link, we applied the random‐effects inverse variance weighting (IVW) method. Additionally, we conducted various sensitivity analyses, including MR‐Egger analysis,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGastrointestinal motility and disorders · Congenital gastrointestinal and neural anomalies · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
