Cargando…

Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?

To date, the exact pathophysiology of haemorrhoids is poorly understood. The different philosophies on haemorrhoids aetiology may lead to different approaches of treatment. A pathogenic theory involving a correlation between altered anal canal microflora, local inflammation, and muscular dyssynergia...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide, Tutino, Roberta, Messina, Marianna, Santarelli, Mauro, Nigro, Casimiro, Lo Secco, Giacomo, Piceni, Chiara, Montanari, Elena, Barletta, Gabriele, Venturelli, Paolina, Geraci, Girolamo, Bonventre, Sebastiano, Lo Monte, Attilio Ignazio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10054427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36983199
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12062198
_version_ 1785015668178944000
author Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide
Tutino, Roberta
Messina, Marianna
Santarelli, Mauro
Nigro, Casimiro
Lo Secco, Giacomo
Piceni, Chiara
Montanari, Elena
Barletta, Gabriele
Venturelli, Paolina
Geraci, Girolamo
Bonventre, Sebastiano
Lo Monte, Attilio Ignazio
author_facet Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide
Tutino, Roberta
Messina, Marianna
Santarelli, Mauro
Nigro, Casimiro
Lo Secco, Giacomo
Piceni, Chiara
Montanari, Elena
Barletta, Gabriele
Venturelli, Paolina
Geraci, Girolamo
Bonventre, Sebastiano
Lo Monte, Attilio Ignazio
author_sort Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide
collection PubMed
description To date, the exact pathophysiology of haemorrhoids is poorly understood. The different philosophies on haemorrhoids aetiology may lead to different approaches of treatment. A pathogenic theory involving a correlation between altered anal canal microflora, local inflammation, and muscular dyssynergia is proposed through an extensive review of the literature. Since the middle of the twentieth century, three main theories exist: (1) the varicose vein theory, (2) the vascular hyperplasia theory, and (3) the concept of a sliding anal lining. These phenomena determine changes in the connective tissue (linked to inflammation), including loss of organization, muscular hypertrophy, fragmentation of the anal subepithelial muscle and the elastin component, and vascular changes, including abnormal venous dilatation and vascular thrombosis. Recent studies have reported a possible involvement of gut microbiota in gut motility alteration. Furthermore, dysbiosis seems to represent the leading cause of bowel mucosa inflammation in any intestinal district. The alteration of the gut microbioma in the anorectal district could be responsible for haemorrhoids and other anorectal disorders. A deeper knowledge of the gut microbiota in anorectal disorders lays the basis for unveiling the roles of these various gut microbiota components in anorectal disorder pathogenesis and being conductive to instructing future therapeutics. The therapeutic strategy of antibiotics, prebiotics, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation will benefit the effective application of precision microbiome manipulation in anorectal disorders.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10054427
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100544272023-03-30 Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship? Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide Tutino, Roberta Messina, Marianna Santarelli, Mauro Nigro, Casimiro Lo Secco, Giacomo Piceni, Chiara Montanari, Elena Barletta, Gabriele Venturelli, Paolina Geraci, Girolamo Bonventre, Sebastiano Lo Monte, Attilio Ignazio J Clin Med Hypothesis To date, the exact pathophysiology of haemorrhoids is poorly understood. The different philosophies on haemorrhoids aetiology may lead to different approaches of treatment. A pathogenic theory involving a correlation between altered anal canal microflora, local inflammation, and muscular dyssynergia is proposed through an extensive review of the literature. Since the middle of the twentieth century, three main theories exist: (1) the varicose vein theory, (2) the vascular hyperplasia theory, and (3) the concept of a sliding anal lining. These phenomena determine changes in the connective tissue (linked to inflammation), including loss of organization, muscular hypertrophy, fragmentation of the anal subepithelial muscle and the elastin component, and vascular changes, including abnormal venous dilatation and vascular thrombosis. Recent studies have reported a possible involvement of gut microbiota in gut motility alteration. Furthermore, dysbiosis seems to represent the leading cause of bowel mucosa inflammation in any intestinal district. The alteration of the gut microbioma in the anorectal district could be responsible for haemorrhoids and other anorectal disorders. A deeper knowledge of the gut microbiota in anorectal disorders lays the basis for unveiling the roles of these various gut microbiota components in anorectal disorder pathogenesis and being conductive to instructing future therapeutics. The therapeutic strategy of antibiotics, prebiotics, probiotics, and fecal microbiota transplantation will benefit the effective application of precision microbiome manipulation in anorectal disorders. MDPI 2023-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC10054427/ /pubmed/36983199 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12062198 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Hypothesis
Palumbo, Vincenzo Davide
Tutino, Roberta
Messina, Marianna
Santarelli, Mauro
Nigro, Casimiro
Lo Secco, Giacomo
Piceni, Chiara
Montanari, Elena
Barletta, Gabriele
Venturelli, Paolina
Geraci, Girolamo
Bonventre, Sebastiano
Lo Monte, Attilio Ignazio
Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title_full Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title_fullStr Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title_full_unstemmed Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title_short Altered Gut Microbic Flora and Haemorrhoids: Could They Have a Possible Relationship?
title_sort altered gut microbic flora and haemorrhoids: could they have a possible relationship?
topic Hypothesis
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10054427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36983199
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12062198
work_keys_str_mv AT palumbovincenzodavide alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT tutinoroberta alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT messinamarianna alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT santarellimauro alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT nigrocasimiro alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT loseccogiacomo alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT picenichiara alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT montanarielena alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT barlettagabriele alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT venturellipaolina alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT geracigirolamo alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT bonventresebastiano alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship
AT lomonteattilioignazio alteredgutmicrobicfloraandhaemorrhoidscouldtheyhaveapossiblerelationship