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Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a severe, debilitating and potentially life threatening illness that is difficult to treat. A cardinal symptom of AN is the mistaken belief on the part of the individuals that they are overweight and must continue to restrict intake. This fixed false belief is a detrimental factor to recovery. It is known that AN involves disturbance in the gut microbiome (GM; the microbes that live in the lower intestinal tract). The GM also affects how one thinks and makes food choices - there appears to be a direct link between the GM and how the brain functions. This connection is thought to occur through chemical processes that convey information from the gut to the brain. It is known that fecal microbiome transplant (FMT) has been useful in treating several illnesses, including several mental illnesses. The investigators intend to deliver FMT to individuals with AN to determine the extent to which this modifies their GM, their biochemistry, their thinking processes and their moods and emotions. The investigators believe this will illuminate important aspects of AN that keep the illness in place, and that this will uncover useful approaches to better treat it.
Full description
The overall objective is to determine FMT's acceptability and the extent and means by which it helps patients with AN, restricting type. The investigators hypothesize that FMT will lead to diversification of the GM, improved metabolic and immunological status and reduced cognitive and psychiatric symptoms in patients with AN, details never investigated before. This will be due to FMT's ability to impart healthy microorganisms into the lower intestines and, thereby, improve GBM-axis signaling that may contribute to maintaining AN. The investigators propose that this will result in measurable improvement in cognitive distortions about weight, leading to reduced AN symptomatology, breaking the weight loss/AN cycle.
Specific Aims & Hypotheses
This is a one-group, pre-/post-intervention trial of FMT in AN-restricting type, with 1-week, 3-week and 3-month follow up, administered before specialized eating disorders treatment. The hypotheses are:
This is a prospective, longitudinal, single-arm, pre-post intervention. Variables will be compared using repeated-measures analyses with each participant as their own comparator.
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20 participants in 1 patient group
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Michael Wammes; Medina Meddaoui
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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