Here is a link I got from Dr. Rhonda Patrick about how their is a gut-brain 
interaction related to the syndromes of Parkinson's Disease that was affected 
by vagus nerve severing. 

Mind Body Interaction coolness.


https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-find-another-sign-that-parkinson-s-starts-in-the-gut-and-not-in-the-brain
 

 

 

 We Just Got More New Evidence That Parkinson's Starts in The Gut - Not The 
Brain 
 We're just scratching the surface.
 
 DAVID NIELD 
 28 APR 2017 

 
 
 
 
 Scientists have found more new evidence that Parkinson's could start in the 
gut before spreading to the brain, observing lower rates of the disease in 
patients who had undergone a procedure called a truncal vagotomy 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagotomy.
 The operation removes sections of the vagus nerve 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vagus_nerve - which links the digestive tract 
with the brain - and over the course of a five-year study, patients who had 
this link completely removed were 40 percent less likely to develop Parkinson's 
than those who hadn't.
 According to a team led by Bojing Liu from the Karolinska Instituet in Sweden, 
that's a significant difference, and it backs up earlier work 
https://www.sciencealert.com/new-evidence-suggests-parkinson-s-might-start-in-the-gut-before-spreading-to-the-brain
 linking the development of the brain disease to something happening inside our 
bellies.
 If we can understand more about how this link operates, we might be better 
able to stop it.
 "These results provide preliminary evidence that Parkinson's disease may start 
in the gut," says Liu. 
http://www.newswise.com/articles/could-parkinson-s-disease-start-in-the-gut
 "Other evidence for this hypothesis is that people with Parkinson's disease 
often have gastrointestinal problems such as constipation 
http://thelancet.com/journals/laneur/article/PIIS1474-4422%2814%2970287-X/abstract,
 that can start decades before they develop the disease."
 The vagus nerve helps control various unconscious processes like heart rate 
and digestion, and resecting parts of it in a vagotomy is usually done to 
remove an ulcer if the stomach is producing a dangerous level of acid.
 For this study, the researchers looked at 40 years of data from Swedish 
national registers, to compare 9,430 people who had a vagotomy against 377,200 
people from the general population who hadn't.
 The likelihood of people in these two groups to develop Parkinson's was 
statistically similar at first - until the researchers looked at the type of 
vagotomy that had been carried out on the smaller group.
 In total, 19 people (just 0.78 percent of the sample) developed Parkinson's 
more than five years after a truncal (complete) vagotomy, compared to 60 people 
(1.08 percent) who had a selective vagotomy.
 Compare that to the 3,932 (1.15 percent) of people who had no surgery and 
developed Parkinson's after being monitored for at least five years, and it 
seems clear that the vagus nerve is playing some kind of role here.
 So what's going on here? One hypothesis the scientists put forward is that gut 
proteins start folding in the wrong way, and that genetic 'mistake' gets 
carried up to the brain somehow, with the mistake being spread from cell to 
cell.
 Parkinson's develops as neurons in the brain get killed off, leading to 
tremors, stiffness, and difficulty with movement - but scientists aren't sure 
how it's caused in the first place. The new study gives them a helpful tip 
about where to look.
 The latest research isn't alone in its conclusions. Last year, tests on mice 
https://www.sciencealert.com/new-evidence-suggests-parkinson-s-might-start-in-the-gut-before-spreading-to-the-brain
 showed links between certain mixes of gut bacteria and a greater likelihood of 
developing Parkinson's.
 What's more, earlier this year a study in the US 
https://www.sciencealert.com/evidence-piles-up-linking-parkinson-s-disease-with-the-bacteria-in-our-gut
 identified differences between the gut bacteria of those with Parkinson's 
compared with those who didn't have the condition.
 All of this is useful for scientists looking to prevent Parkinson's, because 
if we know where it starts, we can block off the source.
 But we shouldn't get ahead of ourselves - as the researchers behind the new 
study point out, Parkinson's is complex condition, and they weren't able to 
include controls for all potential factors, including caffeine intake and 
smoking.
 It's also worth noting that Parkinson's is classed as a syndrome 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syndrome: a collection of different but related 
symptoms that may have multiple causes.
 "Much more research is needed to test this theory and to help us understand 
the role this may play in the development of Parkinson's," says Lui 
http://www.newswise.com/articles/could-parkinson-s-disease-start-in-the-gut.
 

 The research has been published in Neurology 
http://www.neurology.org/content/early/2017/04/26/WNL.0000000000003961.

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