The gut microbiome plays an important role in many aspects of health, from digestion and immune function to metabolic balance ...
The gut microbiome is linked to various health aspects, including heart disease. Emerging research, termed the 'gut-heart axis,' suggests that microbial diversity and metabolites like TMAO and IPA ...
The human gut microbiome has a close connection to our well-being, and it has the potential to be used as a biomarker of ...
Before the onset of cardiovascular disease symptoms, people often develop dyslipidemia, or abnormal levels of lipids in the blood. Recent studies suggest that microbes in the gut play an important ...
A growing body of research now links the trillions of microbes living in the human gut to how well people age, with recent studies identifying specific bacterial signatures that distinguish healthy ...
In both neurologic and psychiatric conditions, it is difficult to know what came first: the disorder, or the unhealthy gut. It is possible that gut dysbiosis is responsible for both disease risk and ...
According to Michael Hartman, Ph.D., vice president of research and development at Plexus Worldwide, nurturing these ...
Researchers discovered that clearing out certain digestive bacteria with antibiotics helps calm the immune system. This temporary microbial shift protected mice from severe brain swelling and cellular ...
Still, human data is more nuanced. “While the evidence that the gut microbiome affects mood is relatively strong, evidence that changing the gut microbiome improves mood is not as strong,” Ziegelstein ...
There's no scientific evidence that the gut microbiome causes autism, a group of scientists argue in an opinion paper publishing November 13 in the Cell Press journal Neuron. They point to the fact ...
The gut and the brain are intricately connected through the gut-brain axis. Dr Rajan explains why anxiety can lead to digestive discomfort and vice versa.