ePoster

RESTING-STATE EEG MARKERS OF CORTICAL SLOWING AND EXPLORATORY PROBIOTIC EFFECTS IN MILD ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE

Benson Botchwayand 12 co-authors

University of Nicosia Medical School

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS05-09AM-097

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS05-09AM-097

Poster preview

RESTING-STATE EEG MARKERS OF CORTICAL SLOWING AND EXPLORATORY PROBIOTIC EFFECTS IN MILD ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS05-09AM-097

Abstract


Figure 1. Resting-state EEG markers of cortical slowing and exploratory probiotic effects in mild Alzheimer’s disease. (A) Posterior (parietal-occipital) relative power spectrum at baseline derived from a composite of posterior electrodes, demonstrating low-frequency (delta-theta) dominance with reduced higher-frequency (alpha-beta) power, consistent with cortical network slowing in mild AD. (B) Adjusted within-group changes (post-pre) in fronto-temporal theta and alpha relative power during eyes-closed rest, shown separately for probiotic and placebo groups; exploratory analyses revealed no effects surviving FDR correction. (C) Difference-in-differences estimate for the fronto-temporal theta-alpha ratio (TAR) during eyes-closed rest, shown with 95% confidence intervals; the between group-effect did not survive FDR correction (pFDR = 0.459).Background:

Cortical network slowing, characterised by increased low-frequency and reduced higher-frequency EEG activity, is a hallmark of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Modulation of brain function via the gut-brain axis has emerged as a potential therapeutic strategy, yet its effects on electrophysiological markers of AD remain unclear.
Methods: In this double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised trial, 40 patients with mild AD were enrolled; 33 completed baseline and follow-up assessments and were analysed (probiotic = 18, placebo = 15). Participants received a multi-strain probiotic (≈2 x 10¹⁰ CFU/day) or placebo for 16 weeks. Resting-state EEG was recorded under eyes-open and eyes-closed conditions, band-pass filtered and artefact-corrected using conservative epoch rejection. Spectral power (1-40 Hz) was estimated with Welch’s periodogram and expressed as relative band power using a linked-mastoids (A1/A2) reference. Regional spectral power and physiologically motivated spectral ratios were examined. Group-by-time effects were assessed using linear mixed-effects models with difference-in-differences contrasts and false discovery rate (FDR) correction.
Results: At baseline, posterior EEG spectra showed dominant delta-theta with reduced alpha-beta power, consistent with cortical slowing in mild AD. Exploratory analyses suggested very small, state- and region-dependent trends in frontal and fronto-temporal theta and alpha power during eyes-closed rest, and in related spectral ratios, but confidence intervals were wide and no probiotic effects survived FDR correction.
Conclusions: Resting-state EEG provides sensitive markers of cortical dysfunction in mild AD. In this pilot randomised trial, probiotic supplementation did not produce robust, FDR-corrected electrophysiological treatment effects, although exploratory regional patterns motivate further investigation in larger studies.

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.