CCA of stomach–brain coupling and mental health. The
process and outcomes of correlating stomach–brain phase coupling with mental
health, as quantified by 37 variables from 16 validated surveys. Credit:
Banellis, Rebollo et al. (Nature Mental Health, 2025).
Internal physiological states, such as digestion, breathing and heartbeat,
have been consistently linked to mental, psychological and emotional
experiences. This body-mind connection is known to be supported by
interoception, the innate ability to sense internal physiological states and
sensations, such as hunger, thirst, pain, the urge to use the toilet,
heartbeats, breathing and so on.
A crucial interoceptive signal is the so-called gastric rhythm, the
electrical oscillation regularly produced by the stomach as a means to
facilitate digestion. This rhythm has been connected to activity in the
frontoparietal network, a connected set of brain regions that contributes to
the regulation of emotions and attention-related processes.
Past studies suggest that the communication between the gastric rhythm and
the frontoparietal network, broadly referred to as visceral-brain coupling or
gastric-brain coupling, could play a role in some mental health disorders,
including anxiety, depression and stress-related conditions. Yet much about the
link between visceral-brain coupling and emotional or psychological symptoms has not
yet been elucidated.
Researchers at Aarhus University and the German Institute of Human
Nutrition have carried out a new study aimed at further exploring this
relationship by looking at both the mental health symptoms of a group of people
and electrical activity in their
stomachs. Their paper, published in Nature
Mental Health, suggests that a stronger synchronization between the stomach
and the brain is often linked to poorer mental health.
"Visceral rhythms orchestrate the physiological states
underlying human emotion," wrote
Leah Banellis, Ignacio Rebollo and their colleagues in their paper.
"Chronic aberrations in these brain–body interactions are implicated in a
broad spectrum of mental health disorders. However, the relationship between
gastric–brain coupling and affective symptoms remains poorly understood. We
investigated the relationship between this novel interoceptive axis and mental
health in 243 participants, using a cross-validated machine learning
approach."
Banellis, Rebollo and their colleagues assessed the mental health of
participants using a test that prompted them to share their emotional, mental,
social and somatic experiences. They also recorded the electrical signals and
activity in the participants' stomachs, using two widely used experimental
techniques known as electrogastrography (EGG) and functional magnetic resonance
imaging (fMRI).
"We find that increased frontoparietal brain coupling to the gastric
rhythm indexes a dimensional signature of poorer mental health, spanning
anxiety, depression, stress and well-being," wrote Banellis, Rebollo and
their colleagues.
"Control analyses confirm the specificity of these interactions to the
gastric–brain axis. Our study proposes coupling between the stomach and brain
as a factor in mental health and offers potential new targets for interventions
remediating aberrant brain–body coupling."
The results of this team's investigation further emphasize the connection
between gastric-brain coupling and emotional or psychological well-being,
unveiling patterns that are linked to greater anxiety, low mood, stress and
poor mental health. Other researchers could soon conduct additional studies
exploring the processes via which strong connections between
visceral signals and the brain contribute to specific mental health
disorders.
In the future, these works could collectively pave the way for the development of new therapeutic strategies aimed at easing the symptoms of stress-related psychological conditions by tackling anomalous gastric-brain communication patterns.
by Ingrid
Fadelli, Phys.org
edited by Gaby Clark, reviewed by Robert Egan
Source: Stomach-brain communication predicts emotional symptoms and well-being, study finds
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