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Epidemiol Prev. 2021 Jul-Aug;45(4):245-253. doi: 10.19191/EP21.4.P245.080.

[The relationship between physical exercise and gut microbiota in the human being: a systematic review].

Epidemiologia e prevenzione

[Article in Italian]
Federico Clemente, Elisabetta Bravini, Stefano Corna, Enrico Colombo, Francesco Sartorio, Carmela Rinaldi, Stefano Vercelli

Affiliations

  1. Libero professionista, Carpignano Sesia (NO).
  2. Società italiana di fisioterapia, Firenze.
  3. Libera professionista, Barengo (NO).
  4. UO rieducazione e recupero funzionale, Istituti clinici scientifici Maugeri, IRCCS, Istituto scientifico di Gattico-Veruno (NO).
  5. Dipartimento di medicina traslazionale, Scuola di medicina, Università del Piemonte Orientale, Novara.
  6. Azienda ospedaliera universitaria maggiore della carità, Novara.
  7. UO rieducazione e recupero funzionale, Istituti clinici scientifici Maugeri, IRCCS, Istituto scientifico di Gattico-Veruno (NO); [email protected].

PMID: 34549566 DOI: 10.19191/EP21.4.P245.080

Abstract

BACKGROUND: the relationship between physical exercise and gut microbiota has opened new therapeutic frontiers for many inflammatory diseases. However, there is still a lot of uncertainty about how to administer exercise.

OBJECTIVES: to review the literature to bridge this gap and examine the relationship between cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and microbiota.

DESIGN: systematic review.

SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: studies involving humans who undergoing exercise programmes of any lengths, intensities, and types were included. The research was carried out through PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: the primary outcome was change in gut microbiota composition (α and β-diversity), while the secondary outcome was the CRF level.

RESULTS: the 15 studies included (all with PEDro scale <=5) used aerobic training alone or combined with resistance exercises. In general, exercise has shown positive effects on the microbiota, influencing the faecal count of some bacterial phyla (in particular Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria), with a weak tendency towards proportionality in relation to training duration and intensity. However, the evidence supporting the exercise effects on the gut microbiota and the relationship with CRF are of low quality.

CONCLUSIONS: despite the weak evidence in favour of the effects of the practice of physical exercise on the intestinal microbiota, there are still many aspects that need to be explored. In particular, future studies shall have higher quality and methodological rigour, standardize the methods for outcome assessment, and determine type and thresholds of interventions intensity and duration.

Keywords: Bacterial taxa; Cardiorespiratory fitness; Exercise; Gut microbiota; Physiotherapy

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