Gut microbiota 16S rRNA profiling with plasma and urine metabolomics in vestibular migraine
Qijun Yu, Yanan Huang, Yanxue Ren, Changman Zhang, Jinghan Lin, Shijiao Chen, Hongyan Li, Changchang Ying, Zhihui Zhu, Qingling Zhai, Tingting Sun, Yonghui Pan

TL;DR
This study explores gut microbiota and metabolomic differences in vestibular migraine patients compared to migraine patients and healthy controls.
Contribution
The study is the first to use multi-omics to investigate gut microbiota and metabolomic profiles in vestibular migraine.
Findings
VM patients showed distinct gut microbiota composition at the genus level compared to migraine patients and healthy controls.
Plasma metabolomics revealed changes in pyruvate and amino acid metabolism in VM patients.
Urine metabolomics linked tyrosine metabolism and norepinephrine to VM.
Abstract
Vestibular migraine (VM) pathophysiology remains unclear, with research often extrapolating from migraine (M) studies. The microbiota-gut-brain axis represents a novel avenue for exploring VM mechanisms and treatments. This study aimed to compare gut microbiota, plasma and urine metabolome alterations among VM patients, M patients, and healthy controls (Hcs). A cross-sectional study recruited 15 VM patients, 15 M patients, and 15 age-/gender-matched Hcs (April–September 2024) from a tertiary hospital. Final analysis included 10 VM, 15 M, and 15 Hc participants. All underwent fecal 16S rRNA gene sequencing, plasma and urine metabolomics. Demographic and clinical data were collected. Gut microbiota alpha/beta diversity showed no significant inter-group differences. At the phylum level, Verrucomicrobiota and Chloroflexi were reduced in VM vs. M. Genus-level analysis revealed trends…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsVestibular and auditory disorders · Migraine and Headache Studies · Salivary Gland Disorders and Functions
