Abstract
Animal studies demonstrate how the gut microbiota influence psychological health and immunity to viral infections through their actions along multiple dynamic pathways in the body. Considerable interest exists in probiotics to reduce stress and illness symptoms through beneficial effects in the gut, but translating pre-clinical evidence from animal models into humans remains challenging. We conducted a large trial in nurses working during the 2020 COVID19 pandemic year to establish whether daily ingestion of the probiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus HN001 reduced perceived stress and the number of days participants reported symptoms of a viral illness. Our results showed no significant difference in perceived stress or the average number of illness days between probiotic supplemented nurses and the placebo group. Stress and viral illness symptoms reduced during the study for all participants, a trajectory likely influenced by societal-level factors. The powerful effect of a well-managed public health response to the COVID19 pandemic and the elimination of COVID19 from the community in 2020 may have altered the trajectory of stress levels and reduced circulating viral infections making it difficult to detect any effect of probiotic supplementation. Our study highlights the challenge in controlling environmental factors in human trials.
【초록키워드】 public health, Perceived stress, viral infection, COVID19, pandemic, Stress, Immunity, Human, animal model, Symptom, animal, Factors, pathway, Community, trajectory, gut microbiota, trials, Evidence, Nurse, Gut, psychological health, Participants, no significant difference, average, participant, circulating, ingestion, large trial, Effect, environmental factor, stress level, highlight, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, detect, conducted, reduced, reduce, reported symptom, the placebo group, 【제목키워드】 Stress, randomized trial, Nurse, reduce,