The gut
has a mind of its own
Operating like the cranial brain and looking
uncannily similar to it, the gut brain is continuously active, whether
we're aware of it or no, writes CHANTAL OUIMET
By CHANTAL OUIMET
Special to The Globe and Mail
Tuesday, December 31, 2002 – Print Edition, Page R7
Ever wonder why you get cramps when you're stressed? Or why you get
"butterflies" in your stomach before a job interview? And why your gut
tells you not to trust a certain person?
Scientists say it's because the body has two brains -- the familiar one
encased in our skull and another more obscure one in our gut. This "second
brain," known as the enteric nervous system, is located in our digestive
tract and holds about 100-million nerve cells -- more than in our spinal
cord.
Less complex and smaller than our cranial brain, this "second brain,"
which contains between 70 to 85 per cent of the body's immune cells, is an
independent data-processing centre handling a complicated circuitry of
neurons, neuromodulators and neurotransmitters.
"Every neurotransmitter that exists in our brain, also exists in the
gut without exception. The brain in the gut is simply the brain gone
south," says Dr. Michael Gershon, author of The Second Brain, and chairman
of the department of anatomy and cell biology at Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons.
In 1899, anatomists and physiologists studying dogs found that, unlike
any other reflex, the continuous push of material through the digestive
system continued after nerves linking the brain to the intestines were
severed. In other words, they discovered the gut had a mind of its own.
Operating like our brain and looking uncannily similar to it, the gut
brain responds to stimulus and is continuously active whether we're aware
of it or not. But it doesn't think or feel. Feeling is held in the
cerebral cortex of the brain. This "second brain" performs a different
role.
"The brain in the head deals with the finer things in life: religion,
philosophy, appreciation of art and music, creativity, etc.," says Dr.
Gershon. "Whereas the brain in the gut deals with this dirty, messy and
disgusting business of digestion. The brain in the head doesn't have to
get its hands dirty with that kind of thing since it has delegated the
job."
They may have different roles but our two brains are interconnected.
One thousand to 2,000 nerve fibres connect them and enable the two to
talk. When one gets upset, the other one does too.
"I don't think we could have made that statement a few years ago. . . .
We've been finding out that the nerves in the gut independently regulate
gut function, but do so in a dialogue with the nerves in our head. It's a
nerve-to-nerve discussion," says Keith Sharkey, physiology and biophysics
professor at the University of Calgary.
Interest in the gut brain resurfaced in the early 1980s after new
technology became available.
"For the first time, we were able to see in elegant and exquisite
detail the specific way that nerves went from A to B," explains Prof.
Sharkey. "That gives you a chance to ask questions that could not or had
not been asked before."
There are approximately 250 research laboratories now studying the
enteric nervous system around the world. This new breed of neuroscientists
is not only fuelling the present renaissance in the field of
neurogastroenterology (study of the nerves entrenched in the lining of the
esophagus, stomach, small intestine and colon), but offering insights into
malfunctions of both brains.
Scientists have discovered that the gut brain may be involved in
gastrointestinal disorders like ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease and
irritable bowel syndrome -- a condition that affects between 15 and 20 per
cent of the population.
"Back in the days when . . . I was a medical student, I was taught that
these diseases were psychosomatic. . . . But they're a real thing. Your
gut can literately drive your brain crazy," notes Dr. Gershon. "If you are
walking around with a burning sensation in your upper belly and it feels
terrible, you can get pretty anxious. Likewise, if you've got aches and
you're on the toilet with diarrhea every five minutes, it can change your
personality. But it's more than that."
For many years, individuals (mostly women) with irritable bowel
syndrome, a functional disorder characterized by abdominal pain, bloating,
flatulence, diarrhea and/or constipation, suffered in silence. Doctors
believed the illness was imagined -- all in the head.
"We now know IBS is not psychosomatic. There is an element of the brain
controlling the gut which has to be born in the mind. But we now
understand that there is also an organic and physiological basis for the
functional changes in the little brain," declares Prof. Sharkey.
Dr. Nicholas Diamant, a gastroenterologist at Toronto Western Hospital
and an emeritus professor of medicine and physiology at the University of
Toronto, agrees that both brains are involved in the disorder.
"The brain sends signals down to the little brain via the spinal cord
which acts as a gate for the pain signals," Dr. Diamant says. "The brain
may not be closing this gate adequately to modulate and regulate the
signals coming up from the gut. Therefore, the brain is letting more
signals come up than it normally would."
A study by the Mayo Foundation published this August in
Gastroenterology, the official journal of the American Gastroenterological
Association, suggested there is genetic determinant that predicts the
response to medication of IBS patients with diarrhea-predominant symptoms.
"It has to do with how the body inactivates the [neuro]transmitter
serotonin. In some patients, the body inactivation is more efficient and
the patient therefore responds better to the medication," explains Dr.
Michael Carmilleri, professor of medicine and physiology at the Mayo
Clinic in Rochester and one of the authors of the report.
"It's a landmark paper. . . . We are starting to relate changes in the
signalling in the 'second brain' to real diseases based not only on
functional changes but on genetic studies as well," says Prof. Sharkey.
This July, a drug came on the Canadian market to treat patients (women
only) with constipation-predominant IBS. Experts say Tegaserod, known
commercially as Zelnorm, is only effective in 60 to 65 per cent of people.
"IBS is defined by a series of symptoms," says Prof. Sharkey. "It's a
multiple disease entity. . . . We don't understand it well enough to ever
consider a miracle-type cure because it's too complicated for that."
In the case of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis (both autoimmune
diseases), Dr. Carmilleri says the gut brain may play a role. "There is
some interaction between the immune cells in the intestines and the
'second brain.' "
The discovery of the brain-gut connection also allowed scientists to
learn what is at the heart of the most visceral human emotions. A gut
feeling, for example, isn't just a poetic image used to convey intuition.
It arises from the interplay between our two brains.
"It's a "body loop" which is activated every time we are being
challenged or stressed. From a lifetime of activating this "body loop"
during good or bad situations, we learn to interpret this preverbal
feedback as good or bad," says Emeran Mayer, professor of medicine and
physiology at the University of California -- Los Angeles.
Butterflies are minor indicators of pain and another example of this
close relationship. Prof. Mayer says when one is faced with an
anxiety-ridden situation, the brain in our skull sends urgent messages to
our "second brain" and throws it off balance. "The big brain also becomes
more sensitive to signals from the gut and amplifies them to unpleasant
conscious sensations," he wrote. Therefore, one reads this response as
gurgling or "butterflies" in the belly.
Stomach cramps, heartburn, diarrhea or constipation due to stress are
again an illustration of the gut rising to the level of conscious
perception. "The dialogue between the brain in our head and the brain in
our gut sometimes goes awry. . . . in such a way that the brain in our gut
responds inappropriately to stimulus," says Prof. Sharkey. In turn, the
nerves tell the muscles to contract more or less or make the glands
secrete more or less fluid.
Not all of the signals sent from the "second brain" to the cranial
brain are bad news. "Some of the information that is being sent from the
gut to the brain can establish how well the brain in the head works. . . .
Your gut doesn't think for you but if it's behaving well, it can
contribute to your mood being good," says Dr. Gershon. As a result, this
interaction plays a role in dictating behavior and in creating human joy
as well as sadness.
Scientists affirm the brain constantly communicates and listens to our
"second brain." Its functions are then taken over by the brain with
respect to the activation of major emotions such as fear, anxiety, anger,
sadness or happiness. There is no direct proof but a lot of suggestive
evidence.
"Chemicals released from cells within the 'second brain' . . . can
activate vagal sensory neurons (cells high in the neck) which signal back
to the brain. These vagal sensory neurons play a prominent role in many
emotional processes and it is certainly conceivable that such signals play
a role in generating happiness or a sense of well-being. The newborn gets
its first sense of well-being from stimulation of the gut and release of
chemicals through milk," wrote Prof. Mayer.
Dr. Diamant, a specialist in the mind-body connection, says each
person's "second brain" reacts differently. "If you think everybody feels
the same thing when the gut does something, you are in deep trouble. You
have to consider the whole person and all the baggage they carry. The
gut's reaction may be based on many experiences as well as the
individual's genetic makeup."
It's an exciting time for scientists because research in the field of
neurogastroenterology is still evolving. Even medical students are
generally shocked by the "second brain's" complexity. "That hasn't really
made it to the textbooks yet," says Prof. Sharkey. "It takes a few years
for emerging knowledge to become dogma." |