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Diet and Microbiome Interactions: Application in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Adults Consuming Vegetable Drinks (DMAPS)

Colorado State University (CSU) logo

Colorado State University (CSU)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

PTSD - Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Treatments

Other: Low plant diversity beverage
Other: Functional Food intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The gut microbiome has been shown to impact various facets of human health, including mental health. Studies have shown that populations with more agrarian lifestyles tend to have fewer chronic diseases and mental health issues than industrialized populations. A possible factor in these differences is the loss of co-evolved gut microbial taxa that has occurred with Westernization. This hypothesis, termed "Old Friends Hypothesis" suggests that the loss of certain gut microbes leads to immune dysregulation and increased chronic inflammation that contributes to development of cancers, cardiometabolic diseases and even neuroinflammation that can lead to negative behavioral and mental health outcomes. Other studies have shown that increasing the intake of plant foods may help increase diversity of the microbes in the gut and that this increased diversity could lead to better health outcomes in humans.

The investigators propose to evaluate daily consumption of a drink consisting of a high diversity of plants (30 plant species) for four weeks on the diversity of the gut microbiome, biological signatures of inflammation, quality of life, sleep quality, and PTSD symptoms among persons with a diagnosis of PTSD.

The investigators hypothesize that four weeks of daily consumption of this high plant diversity beverage (30 plant species) will increase gut microbiome ɑ-diversity, reduce markers of systemic inflammation, and improve PTSD symptom severity relative to daily consumption of a beverage containing only three plant species.

Full description

The intervention will be a double-blind parallel arm study that consists of a four-week treatment period where participants will be randomized to either the experimental or control arm of the study.

During this four-week treatment period the participants will consume either a 4 oz beverage consisting of 30 different blended vegetables (high diversity treatment) or a similar control beverage consisting of 4 oz of blended Power Greens mix, containing only 3 different plant species (low diversity F&V treatment).

The participants will be asked to provide 2-day diet records every two weeks throughout the study. Participants will also complete daily bowel movement records using the Bristol Stool Scale (BSS) and collect 3 fecal samples (baseline, mid-point and final) that will be returned to the clinic at scheduled visits. Blood samples and gut, sleep, and mental health questionnaire data will be collected at the beginning and end of the study.

Primary objectives are as follows:

Objective 1: To determine whether consuming a higher number of plant types, thereby increasing exposure to diverse plant-associated microbes, increases gut microbial diversity. Specifically, investigators will use fecal samples from individuals before and after 4-week consumption of a 4 oz beverage made with high (30 different plants) and low botanical diversity (3 different plants) to assess taxonomic richness (CHAO) and diversity (Shannon) using 16s rRNA and metagenomic sequencing approaches.

Objective 2: To determine how differences in plant diversity consumption influence inflammation and immune signatures, specifically plasma hsCRP levels and number/type of circulating T-regulatory cells. hsCRP will be assayed using ELISA and T-cells and other immune cells will be profiled from collected peripheral blood mononucleocytes (PBMCs) via flow cytometry.

Objective 3: To determine whether gut microbial diversity and inflammatory profiles correlate with PTSD symptom severity. PTSD symptoms will be evaluated at each visit using the PCL-5 assessment and changes with treatment as well as correlates with other primary outcome measures will be determined.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Healthy adults (age 18-65) with a diagnosis of PTSD and a BMI <35. Participants should be willing to follow the study protocols and attend all clinic visits.

Exclusion criteria

  • Exclusion criteria include antibiotic use within the previous three months, BMI>35, vegan or vegetarian diet, allergies to any of the foods included in the intervention beverages, an unstable medication regimen, and diagnosis of diseases such as gastrointestinal diseases, cancer, CVD, diabetes or autoimmune disease and pregnancy or breastfeeding. Specific medication use (other than antibiotics) would not disqualify an individual if they have had a stable medication regimen for at least two months prior to beginning the study and remain on their medication for the study duration. However, medication changes or antibiotic use during the study would be a reason for dismissal Additionally, inclusion or exclusion in the study will be determined case-by-case based on self-reported supplement use or if the individual feels they are unable to adhere to the study requirements, which includes consuming beverages daily, providing stool or blood samples, tracking bowel movements and symptoms, and attending scheduled clinic visits.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

High plant diversity intervention
Experimental group
Description:
30 different vegetables as a 4 oz blended beverage in a mylar pouch.
Treatment:
Other: Functional Food intervention
Low plant diversity intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
3 vegetable blend as a 4 oz blended beverage in a mylar pouch.
Treatment:
Other: Low plant diversity beverage

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jenny Whittington, MS; Tiffany L Weir, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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