Differential Gut Microbiota, Dietary Intakes in Constipation Patients with or without Hypertension

Author:

Li Junqi1,Ma Guoqing1,Xie Jiawen1,Xu Kun1,Lai Hao1,Li Yunfeng1,He Yafang1,Yu Hang2,Liao Xia3,Wang Xinyan4,Li Zhongxia4,Kong Liyun1,Mi Baibing1,Shen Yuan1,Tian Tian5,Liu Xin1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory for Disease Prevention and Control and Health Promotion of Shaanxi Province School of Public Health Global Health Institute Health Science Center Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an 710061 China

2. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine The First Affiliated Hospital Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an 710061 China

3. Department of Nutrition The First Affiliated Hospital Xi'an Jiaotong University Xi'an 710061 China

4. BYHEALTH Institute of Nutrition & Health Guangzhou 510663 China

5. Department of Nutrition Xi'an Daxing Hospital Xi'an 710016 China

Abstract

ScopeDiet and gut microbiota are involved in blood pressure regulations, but few studies have focused on the constipation patients. The study seeks to identify differences in gut microbiota between hypertensive and normotensive subjects in constipation patients, analyzes the relationship between dietary patterns and blood pressure, and explores mediation effects of gut microbiota.Methods and resultsGut microbial genera and dietary information of 186 functional constipation participants are characterized by 16S rRNA sequencing and a food frequency questionnaire. The hypertensive subjects shows lower α‐diversity and β‐diversity of gut microbiota than normotensive (p < 0.05) and 17 differential microbial genera. The dried‐beans intake frequency inversely correlated with systolic and diastolic blood pressure after multivariate adjustment (r = −0.273, p‐FDR < 0.01; r = −0.251, p‐FDR = 0.026, respectively). Logistic regression indicates that the individuals often consumed dried‐beans have a lower hypertension risk than those never consumed [OR = 0.137, 95% CI: (0.022, 0.689), p = 0.022]. A marginal mediating effect of the genus Monoglobus is observed for the association between high‐fiber dietary pattern and hypertension.ConclusionIn patients with functional constipation, hypertension‐related gut microbial differences are identified. Dried‐beans intake is inversely associated with blood pressure, and a genus may potentially mediate the association between high‐fiber dietary pattern and hypertension.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science,Biotechnology

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