B. Herpertz-Dahlmann, Germany

RWTH Aachen University , Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Specialisation in paediatrics and adolescent medicine as well as in child and adolescent psychiatry. Since 1997 Chair and Director of the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy at the Technical University of Aachen. 2004 -2005 President of the German Society for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. 2006 - 2012 Board Member of the German Society for Eating Disorders. 2007 - 2015 Board Member of the European Society for Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2018 Coauthor of the German guidelines for Eating Disorder. 2016 -2020 member of the expert council “Neurosciences” of the German Research Society (DFG). Research interests: Eating Disorders, especially anorexia nervosa: aetiology, neurobiology, course and treatment

Presenter of 2 Presentations

Symposium: Nutritional Psychiatry (ID 345) No Topic Needed

Live Q&A

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Pre-Recorded with Live Q&A
Date
Mon, 12.04.2021
Session Time
10:00 - 11:30
Room
Channel 4
Lecture Time
11:08 - 11:28
Symposium: Nutritional Psychiatry (ID 345) No Topic Needed

S0087 - Food Matters: Anorexia Nervosa and the Microbiome: First Findings of a European Cooperation

Session Icon
Pre-Recorded with Live Q&A
Date
Mon, 12.04.2021
Session Time
10:00 - 11:30
Room
Channel 4
Lecture Time
10:34 - 10:51

ABSTRACT

Abstract Body

Anorexia nervosa (AN) is one of the most common chronic disorders in adolescence with still high mortality rates. Knowledge on gut-brain interaction might help to develop new treatments, as severe starvation-induced changes of the microbiome in AN-patients have been demonstrated, which do not alleviate with weight gain. In our own pilot study alpha-diversity was increased in patients with AN after short-term weight recovery, while beta diversity showed clear group differences with healthy controls before and after weight gain. A reduction of taxa belonging to Enterobacteriaceae at admission and discharge and an increase in taxa belonging to Lachnospiraceae at discharge were typically found in patients with AN.

The work plan of our European project comprises an observational study and two phase II RCTs with the application of omega-3-PUFA and a multistrain psychobiotic to both, humans and rodents. With the help of a well-established animal model for AN (activity-based anorexia, ABA), the effect of stool transplants from patients to rodents will be analysed. Longitudinal MRI will be conducted in rodents together with cellular and molecular brain analyses. In addition, immune response and circulating antibodies associated with the presence of certain bacterial strains and interaction with hunger and satiety hormones will be explored. We hope that by this translational research we may systematically investigate the role of an altered microbiome for the course of AN and to identify new therapeutic tools.

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