Journal article
Effects of a high-prebiotic diet versus probiotic supplements versus synbiotics on adult mental health: The “Gut Feelings” randomised controlled trial
TM Freijy, L Cribb, G Oliver, NJ Metri, RS Opie, FN Jacka, JA Hawrelak, JJ Rucklidge, CH Ng, J Sarris
Frontiers in Neuroscience | Published : 2023
Abstract
Background: Preliminary evidence supports the use of dietary interventions and gut microbiota-targeted interventions such as probiotic or prebiotic supplementation for improving mental health. We report on the first randomised controlled trial (RCT) to examine the effects of a high-prebiotic dietary intervention and probiotic supplements on mental health. Methods: “Gut Feelings” was an 8-week, 2 × 2 factorial RCT of 119 adults with moderate psychological distress and low prebiotic food intake. Treatment arms: (1) probiotic supplement and diet-as-usual (probiotic group); (2) high-prebiotic diet and placebo supplement (prebiotic diet group); (3) probiotic supplement and high-prebiotic diet (sy..
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Funding Acknowledgements
Funding In-kind sponsorship was provided by BioCeuticals: probiotic and placebo supplements (www.bioceuticals.com.au); the Healthy Grain: barley-based breakfast cereal (www.thehealthygrain.com); Uncle Tobys: rolled oats, muesli, and fruit/grain snack bars (www.uncletobys.com.au); Sanitarium: wheat biscuit breakfast cereal (www.sanitarium.com.au); Ward McKenzie's: dried legumes (www.mckenziesfoods.com.au); and Real Foods: corn crispbread (www.cornthins.com). The sponsors had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.