Revisiting geophagy: An evolved sickness behavior to microbiome-mediated gastrointestinal inflammation
- PMID: 37661330
- DOI: 10.1002/evan.22004
Revisiting geophagy: An evolved sickness behavior to microbiome-mediated gastrointestinal inflammation
Abstract
Geophagy, the consumption of clay or similar substances, is known as an evolved behavior that protects vulnerable populations, such as pregnant women and children, against gastrointestinal injury. However, perplexing questions remain, like the presence of geophagy in the absence of overt gastrointestinal infection and the potential causal relationship between geophagy and iron deficiency anemia. In this review, we hypothesize that geophagy is an inflammation-mediated sickness behavior regulated via the vagus nerve. We further hypothesize that the gut microbiome plays a critical role in mediating the relationship between inflammation and geophagy. By including inflammation and the microbiome within the existing protection hypothesis, we can explain how subclinical gastrointestinal states induce geophagy. Furthermore, we can explain how gastrointestinal inflammation is responsible for both geophagy and iron-deficiency anemia, explaining why the two phenomena frequently co-occur. Ultimately, defining geophagy as a sickness behavior allows us to integrate the gut-brain axis into geophagy research.
Keywords: anemia; gastrointestinal stress; geophagy; inflammation; intestinal microbiome; iron deficiency; pica; sickness behavior.
© 2023 Wiley Periodicals LLC.
References
REFERENCES
-
- Young S. Craving Earth. Columbia University Press; 2011.
-
- Reid RM. Cultural and medical perspectives on geophagia. Medical Anthropology. 1992;13(4):337-351.
-
- Young SL, Khalfan SS, Farag TH, et al. Association of pica with anemia and gastrointestinal distress among pregnant women in Zanzibar, Tanzania. The American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. 2010;83(1):144.
-
- Young SL, Sherman PW, Lucks JB, Pelto GH. Why on earth?: Evaluating hypotheses about the physiological functions of human geophagy. The Quarterly Review of Biology. 2011;86(2):97-120.
-
- Levy M, Kolodziejczyk AA, Thaiss CA, Elinav E. Dysbiosis and the immune system. Nature Reviews Immunology. 2017;17(4):219-232.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources