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A new study has found a thriving microbiome living in the brains of even healthy people.
The most abundant microbes found living in the brain are fungi, bacteria, and chloroplastida (green algae). The significance of having algae living in the brain is not at this stage known. Other unusual microbes found in the brain are amoebozoa, basal eukaryota, and holozoa/metazoa.
Around 20% of the species detected in gut microbiome were present in the brain microbiome.
Adenovirus type C was the major virus found in human brain; other viruses were not well represented. But low levels of herpes simplex 1 virus, Epstein-Barr virus and cytomegalovirus were found.
The authors say finding that adenovirus is the major virus present in the human brain, both in controls and in Alzheimer's patients, is of interest because adenovirus can cause long-term CNS inflammation in animal models.
In terms of how many microbes there are living in the healthy brain, for every one human brain cell, there are
0.14 bacteria and 0.05 fungi. In some of the heavily infected Alzheimer's brains, there were 1.8 microbes for every brain cell.
A newspaper article on this study:
The brain microbiome: could understanding it help prevent dementia?
The article details how sometimes dementia is due to a brain infection, and can be reversed with antimicrobials:
The most abundant microbes found living in the brain are fungi, bacteria, and chloroplastida (green algae). The significance of having algae living in the brain is not at this stage known. Other unusual microbes found in the brain are amoebozoa, basal eukaryota, and holozoa/metazoa.
Around 20% of the species detected in gut microbiome were present in the brain microbiome.
Adenovirus type C was the major virus found in human brain; other viruses were not well represented. But low levels of herpes simplex 1 virus, Epstein-Barr virus and cytomegalovirus were found.
The authors say finding that adenovirus is the major virus present in the human brain, both in controls and in Alzheimer's patients, is of interest because adenovirus can cause long-term CNS inflammation in animal models.
In terms of how many microbes there are living in the healthy brain, for every one human brain cell, there are
0.14 bacteria and 0.05 fungi. In some of the heavily infected Alzheimer's brains, there were 1.8 microbes for every brain cell.
A newspaper article on this study:
The brain microbiome: could understanding it help prevent dementia?
The article details how sometimes dementia is due to a brain infection, and can be reversed with antimicrobials:
A recent paper she jointly lead-authored, published in Alzheimer’s and Dementia, compiled a long list of case reports where infectious disease was discovered to be the primary cause of dementia, meaning that, in many cases, the dementia was reversible.
A few of the patients died, but most survived and saw significant improvements in cognitive function, including a man in his 70s who had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease after his swift cognitive decline saw him unable to drive or, eventually, leave the house alone. A sample of his cerebrospinal fluid was taken and revealed a fungal infection caused by Cryptococcus neoformans. Within two years of taking antifungal medication, he was driving again and back at work as a gardener.
A common infection among the dementia cases was what the gardener had: C neoformans, a fungus often found in plants and animals, the spores of which are easily inhaled.