In a recent experimental study, researchers used rats to explore whether the use of probiotics such as Lactobacillus can mitigate anxiety- and depression-like behaviors, counteracting the psychological and biological effects of H. pylori infection. Infected rats were treated with each probiotic alone or with the combination, and were then evaluated using standard behavioral tests for anxiety and depression.
Both probiotics, especially when co-administered, reversed the depressive and anxiogenic effects induced by H. pylori. Probiotic supplementation also corrected several brain changes linked to H. pylori, including oxidative stress, inflammation, reduced BDNF/serotonin, and elevated corticosterone.
The findings suggest that multi-strain probiotics may help manage psychiatric symptoms associated with H. pylori infection, and that they merit further clinical evaluation in patients with psychiatric comorbidities.
Learn more about this study here: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12602-025-10674-4
Reference
Ahmadi-Soleimani, S.M., Masoudi, M., Tabrizi, A.M.A. et al. Regulatory Effects of Probiotics on Anxiety and Depression-Like Behaviors in H. pylori-Infected Rats. Probiotics & Antimicro. Prot. (2025)
