2013
DOI: 10.1038/tp.2013.83
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Antipsychotics and the gut microbiome: olanzapine-induced metabolic dysfunction is attenuated by antibiotic administration in the rat

Abstract: The atypical antipsychotic olanzapine is often associated with serious metabolic side effects including weight gain and increased visceral fat. These adverse events are a considerable clinical problem and the mechanisms underlying them are multifactorial and poorly understood. Growing evidence suggests that the gut microbiota has a key role in energy regulation and disease states such as obesity. Moreover, we recently showed that chronic olanzapine altered the composition of the gut microbiome in the rat. It i… Show more

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Cited by 208 publications
(189 citation statements)
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“…6,99 In fact, when rats were administered the antipsychotic olanzapine in the presence of a cocktail of broad-spectrum antibiotics, the Firmicutes phylum was suppressed and the relative abundance of Bacteroidetes was increased while at the same time ameliorating the olanzapine-induced weight gain, uterine fat deposition, plasma free fatty acid levels, and macrophage infiltration of adipose tissue. 100 These findings of a microbiota-dependent, olanzapine-induced weight gain have recently been confirmed in GF mice, and in in vitro studies point to a direct interaction between olanzapine and microbes. 101 …”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…6,99 In fact, when rats were administered the antipsychotic olanzapine in the presence of a cocktail of broad-spectrum antibiotics, the Firmicutes phylum was suppressed and the relative abundance of Bacteroidetes was increased while at the same time ameliorating the olanzapine-induced weight gain, uterine fat deposition, plasma free fatty acid levels, and macrophage infiltration of adipose tissue. 100 These findings of a microbiota-dependent, olanzapine-induced weight gain have recently been confirmed in GF mice, and in in vitro studies point to a direct interaction between olanzapine and microbes. 101 …”
mentioning
confidence: 81%
“…At baseline, when the fecal samples were collected, all but two patients were treated with antipsychotics. To what extent this may have impacted the findings is unclear, but antipsychotics have been found to influence microbiota composition [69][70][71].…”
Section: Psychotic Disordersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet today medical science also is moving in the direction of the microbiome (14,15), a diverse and rapidly evolving virome (16)(17)(18)(19)(20), metagenome (14), and the microbial mycome, transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome (21)(22)(23)(24)(25)(26)(27). There is increasing evidence that the microbiome and its output (our interactome) touch many, if not most, pathways that affect health, disease, and aging.…”
Section: R E V I E W S E R I E S Introduction : G U T M Imentioning
confidence: 99%