Probiotics could be used as adjuvant treatments in prehypertension management to restore gut microbiota dysbiosis caused by a high-salt diet. This study investigated the antihypertensive effects of the probiotic Lactobacillus rhamnosus strain GG (LGG) on high-salt diet-induced prehypertensive rats. Eighteen Sprague-Dawley rats were assigned equally into three groups: normotensive fed on a normal diet (ND), prehypertensive induced on a 4% NaCl high-salt diet (HSD), and prehypertensive induced on an HSD treated with LGG at 1 × 10 CFU daily for 8 weeks (LGG). Weekly changes in water, food, body weight, diastolic blood pressure (DBP), systolic blood pressure (SBP), and mean arterial pressure (MAP) were monitored. Serum levels of Na, K, Cl, ALB, Ca, and TP were measured at the end of treatment, along with morphological and histomorphometric changes in the small intestine. Stool samples collected before (W0) and 8 weeks after treatment (W8) were sequenced for bacterial 16S rDNA metagenomics. Probiotic LGG significantly reduces average DBP, SBP, and MAP while improving gut integrity through intact intestine morphology, higher villus heights, and a V/C ratio. At the genus level, the LGG group’s gut microbiota composition is more similar to the HSD profile at W0 but shifts to the ND profile after treatment at W8. Thus, probiotic LGG lowers blood pressure indices, improves serum biochemistry profile, restores small intestinal integrity barrier, and modulates gut microbiota profile, indicating its potential as an adjuvant treatment for prehypertension and the significance of gut health in blood pressure regulation.© 2025. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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