Probiotics are well known to benefit digestive health, but prebiotics are less well understood.
Prebiotics are certain types of non-digestible fibres that probiotic bacteria feed on, such as the fibres found in many plant sources like asparagus, oatmeal, and legumes.
Certain bacteria also feed on non-fibres such as the protein lactoferrin, which also acts like a prebiotic and is found in breast milk.
"Acute stress can disrupt the gut microbiome and we wanted to test if a diet rich in prebiotics would increase beneficial bacteria as well as protect gut microbes from stress-induced disruptions," said Agnieszka Mika, a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Colorado, Boulder in the US.
More From This Section
In this experiment, test rats received prebiotic diets for several weeks prior to a stressful test condition and compared with control rats that did not receive the prebiotic-enriched diet.
Rats that ate prebiotics prior to the stressful event did not experience stress-induced disruption in their gut microbiota and also recovered healthier sleep patterns sooner than controls.
"The stressor the rats received was the equivalent of a single intense acute stressful episode for humans, such as a car accident or the death of a loved one," said lead author Robert S Thompson, from UC Boulder.