Biome

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Changes uncovered in the gut bacteria of patients with multiple sclero (...)
Changes uncovered in the gut bacteria of patients with multiple sclero (...)
A connection between the bacteria living in the gut and immunological disorders such as multiple sclerosis have long been suspected, but for the first time, researchers have detected clear evidence of changes that tie the two together. Investigators have found that people with multiple sclerosis have different patterns of gut microorganisms than those of their healthy counterparts. In addition, patients receiving treatment for MS have different patterns than untreated patients.
·sciencedaily.com·
Changes uncovered in the gut bacteria of patients with multiple sclero (...)
Children with and without multiple sclerosis have differences in gut b (...)
Children with and without multiple sclerosis have differences in gut b (...)
In a recent study, children with multiple sclerosis had differences in the abundance of specific gut bacteria than children without the disease. Certain types of bacteria were either more or less abundant in children with multiple sclerosis. In particular, there was an association between multiple sclerosis and an increase in gut bacteria that have been linked to inflammation and a decrease in gut bacteria that are considered anti-inflammatory.
·sciencedaily.com·
Children with and without multiple sclerosis have differences in gut b (...)
Combination of cannabinoids, 9- tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabi (...)
Combination of cannabinoids, 9- tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabi (...)
Multiple Sclerosis (MS), is a common autoimmune disease that affects the central nervous system. Currently, there is no cure for MS, and most treatments involve the use of immunosuppressive drugs that can have adverse effects or increased toxicity. Cannabis, commonly known as marijuana, is a product of the Cannabis sativa , and for several centuries has been used as an alternative medicine in many cultures. Cannabis sativa produces over 421 chemical compounds, including about 80 terpenophenols named phytocannabinoids, and include both psychotropic THC and non-psychoactive CBD. In the currently study, we show that a combination therapy using THC and CBD results in amelioration of EAE, an animal model of MS, by reducing hind limb paralysis, decreasing immune cellular infiltration into the brain, and mitigating the presence of inflammatory biomarkers, including gram negative bacteria-associated lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Interestingly, the gut microbiome plays an important role in immune function and studies have shown that it is altered significantly in MS patients. Inasmuch, we performed 16S rRNA sequencing on experimental groups to investigate the gut microbiome composition after using a combination of THC and CBD compared to disease controls. Interestingly, we found that EAE mice showed increase in the mucin degrading bacterial species, Akkermansia municiphila , which was significantly reduced in disease mice treated with THC+CBD. Collectively, our data suggests that THC+CBD can ameliorate EAE by preventing accumulation of mucin-degrading bacteria that would lead to increased gut microbial dysbiosis.
·jimmunol.org·
Combination of cannabinoids, 9- tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabi (...)
Common antibiotics may be linked to temporary mental confusion -- Scie (...)
Common antibiotics may be linked to temporary mental confusion -- Scie (...)
Antibiotics may be linked to a serious disruption in brain function, called delirium, and other brain problems, more than previously thought, according to a new article. Delirium causes mental confusion that may be accompanied by hallucinations and agitation. Medications are often the cause of delirium, but antibiotics are not necessarily the first medications doctors may suspect.
·sciencedaily.com·
Common antibiotics may be linked to temporary mental confusion -- Scie (...)
Connections between gut microbiota and the brain -- ScienceDaily
Connections between gut microbiota and the brain -- ScienceDaily
Intestinal bacteria that can boost bravery or trigger multiple sclerosis: An increasing body of research results confirms the importance of the “gut-brain axis” for neurology and indicates that the triggers for a number of neurological diseases may be located in the digestive tract.
·sciencedaily.com·
Connections between gut microbiota and the brain -- ScienceDaily
Could Turmeric Save Us From The CDC's 'Nightmare Bacteria'
Could Turmeric Save Us From The CDC's 'Nightmare Bacteria'
Research indicates that the ancient spice turmeric may help to mitigate the growing threat of antibiotic resistant infections that the CDC estimates will take 23,000 U.S. lives each year.
·greenmedinfo.com·
Could Turmeric Save Us From The CDC's 'Nightmare Bacteria'
Culture Shock - Questioning the Efficacy and Safety of Probiotics - Yo (...)
Culture Shock - Questioning the Efficacy and Safety of Probiotics - Yo (...)
In certain medical conditions, probiotic supplements may actually make things worse. Subscribe to NutritionFacts.org’s free newsletter to receive our B12 infographic that covers the latest research takeaways and Dr. Greger’s updated recommendations: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe/ Support NutritionFacts.org with a donation at http://www.NutritionFacts.org/donate. This is a link to the video I alluded to: Preventing the Common Cold with Probiotics? (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/preventing-the-common-cold-with-probiotics). I also talk about the potential benefits in my videos Preventing and Treating Diarrhea with Probiotics (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/preventing-and-treating-diarrhea-with-probiotics/) and Gut Feelings: Probiotics and Mental Health (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/gut-feelings-probiotics-and-mental-health/). Perhaps it would be safer and more effective to instead focus on fostering the growth of the good bacteria with have by feeding them prebiotics (fiber and resistant starch): • Prebiotics: Tending Our Inner Garden (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/prebiotics-tending-our-inner-garden) • Boosting Good Bacteria in the Colon Without Probiotics (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/boosting-good-bacteria-in-the-colon-without-probiotics/) • Resistant Starch and Colon Cancer (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/resistant-starch-colon-cancer) • Gut Dysbiosis - Starving Our Microbial Self (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/is-obesity-infectious) • How to Become a Fecal Transplant Super Donor (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/How-to-Become-a-Fecal-Transplant-Super-Donor) • Microbiome: We Are What They Eat (https://nutritionfacts.org/video/Microbiome-We-Are-What-They-Eat) Have a question about this video? Leave it in the comment section at http://nutritionfacts.org/video/culture-shock-questioning-the-efficacy-and-safety-of-probiotics and someone on the NutritionFacts.org team will try to answer it. Want to get a list of links to all the scientific sources used in this video? Click on Sources Cited at http://nutritionfacts.org/video/culture-shock-questioning-the-efficacy-and-safety-of-probiotics. You’ll also find a transcript and acknowledgements for the video, my blog and speaking tour schedule, and an easy way to search (by translated language even) through our videos spanning more than 2,000 health topics. If you’d rather watch these videos on YouTube, subscribe to my YouTube Channel here: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=nutritionfactsorg Thanks for watching. I hope you’ll join in the evidence-based nutrition revolution! -Michael Greger, MD FACLM Captions for this video are available in several languages. To find yours, click on the settings wheel on the lower-right of the video and then "Subtitles/CC." Do you have feedback about the translations in this video? Please share it here along with the title of the video and language: https://nutritionfacts.zendesk.com/hc/requests/new To view the subtitles in transcript format, click on the ellipsis button below the video, choose "Open transcript", and select the language you'd like to view them in. Icons created by Laymik, Tinashe Mugayi, Nikita Kozin, and Tomas Knopp from The Noun Project. Image credit: Kristina DeMuth https://NutritionFacts.org • Subscribe: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe • Donate: https://nutritionfacts.org/donate • Podcast : https://nutritionfacts.org/audio • Facebook: www.facebook.com/NutritionFacts.org • Twitter: www.twitter.com/nutrition_facts • Instagram: www.instagram.com/nutrition_facts_org • Books (including the NEW How Not to Diet Cookbook): https://nutritionfacts.org/books • Shop: https://drgreger.org
·youtube.com·
Culture Shock - Questioning the Efficacy and Safety of Probiotics - Yo (...)
Digestion, Gut Microbiome Probiotics & Prebiotics -- Russell Jaffe, MD (...)
Digestion, Gut Microbiome Probiotics & Prebiotics -- Russell Jaffe, MD (...)
Science says eating just one meal per day can improve your health. Learn more at https://highintensityhealth.com/OMAD ----- Access the Show Notes & Download the Audio: http://highintensityhealth.com/digestion-gut-microbiome-probiotics-prebiotics-russell-jaffe-md-phd-ccn/ Key Points: 15:15 Antibiotics Lay Waste to our Microbiome. This is well explained in When Antibiotics Fail: Restoring the Ecology of the Body, a book by Mark Lappe’ and in Michael Schmidt’s work. You need to work intensively replenishing every day for 3 to 6 months after antibiotic exposure using multiple healthy organisms, fermented food and active supplements. Dr. Jaffe uses the power of billions of live CFU, colony forming units, in human implantable strains. Live bugs work and dead bugs don’t. 16:43 We Can Make Our Own: We can make our own prebiotic foods with high fiber to feed the good bugs. We can take in enough probiotic organisms to replenish those expended from stress and toxin exposure, and symbiotic foods, nutrients like recycled glutamine, which helps repair the digestive tract. Prebiotics, probiotics and symbiotics form a triad. 17:33 Renaissance of Proactive Primary Prevention: For the past 3 years, throughout the world there have been public health initiatives to get more prebiotic high fiber, probiotic organisms, and symbiotics into our diets. The lining of the intestinal tract is one of the most vulnerable places in the body. It replaces itself about every 3 days. A healthy person’s digestive tract, if laid out flat, would be as large as a tennis court. Most American adults suffer from atrophy of their digestive tract because they have not been nourishing and nurturing it. This means that they only have a few square feet. The good news is that this can nearly always be rehabilitated. 18:57 The Age Myth: It is a lie that once we begin to decline with age that it can be slowed and symptoms can be suppressed, but the decline is irreversible and inescapable. The age myth is about the proportion of unhealthy people at certain stages of life. Dr. Jaffe has tested groups of 90 to 100 year olds and healthy 20 to 30 year olds, drawing their blood, culturing their white cells, culturing muscles and other cells, and the groups are indistinguishable from each other. 20:48 A Detailed Description of Digestion: Digestion begins with your eyes. They tell your gut and your brain, what you will be consuming. As we chew, small bits of food escape through the mucosa to inform the brain and the gut as to what digestive juices will be needed for this meal. The stomach churns and produces acid. People with ulcers have low stomach acid and healthy people have lots of stomach acid. Proton pump inhibitors are prescribed all the time. Often, if you believe they will work, they will work just slightly better than placebos. When you inhibit stomach acid production, you set up a chain of events of maldigestion, often with the sensitization of the immune system. It is essential that we have an amino acid called histadine that donates the proton, the acid that keeps the stomach acidic so that pepsin, the enzyme that loves to be in that acid environment, begins to open the food particles, especially the proteins and the concentrated foods. The acid in the chyme, which is the stuff that comes out of the stomach and is delivered to the small intestine, triggers a bicarbonate and digestive enzyme release from the pancreas. . We meet the bicarbonate and digestive enzymes that pour out of the pancreas to neutralize the stomach acid and begin the next phase. At a small duct, bile comes in to emulsify fats, bringing fat soluble vitamins and nutrients into the body. For the next 20 feet, nutrients are taken up selectively. Then it is on to the large intestine, which should not have digestive remnants. By the time we get to the ileocecal valve that separates the small intestine from the large, the food should be broken down to non-immune reactive building blocks that get assimilated. There should be enough fiber to bind toxins and remove them from the body. These toxins are putrescine, cadaverine, and other polyamines, which can form when digestive transit time is longer than the healthy 12 to 18 hours. 25:17 Digestive Transit Time: Typical Americans have a 72 hour to 144 hour transit time from entrance to exit. If you are, you will want to increase the fiber in your diet, you eat foods that you can digest, assimilate and eliminate without immune burden, if you have some sense of portion control, so we do not overwhelm the body. Only about 1 in 20 Americans, or about 5% of our population, has a healthy transit time of 12 to 18 hours and a healthy digestion. Maldigestion, dysbiosis, inflammatory atrophy and enteropathy of the digestive mechanisms is at epidemic proportions and has been for many decades. These digestive disorders are most often the cause of chronic degenerative autoimmune and inflammatory conditions.
·youtube.com·
Digestion, Gut Microbiome Probiotics & Prebiotics -- Russell Jaffe, MD (...)
Discover the exquisite connections between health, disease and our microbiomes. - YouTube
Discover the exquisite connections between health, disease and our microbiomes. - YouTube
An extraordinary Facebook Live with Dr. Mike Hoaglin, MD from uBiome. You’ll understand: ✓ What the microbiome is and why it’s a huge clue into your health status. ✓ What it impacts and how you can change your microbiome and change the course of your health. ✓ The best evidenced-based way to test your microbiome. ✓ What your weight has to do with your microbiome. ✓ The number one change you can make right now to alter your microbiome, and so much more...
·youtube.com·
Discover the exquisite connections between health, disease and our microbiomes. - YouTube
Distal airway microbiome is associated with immunoregulatory myeloid c (...)
Distal airway microbiome is associated with immunoregulatory myeloid c (...)
Long-term survival of lung transplant recipients (LTRs) is limited by the occurrence of bronchiolitis obliterans syndrome (BOS). Recent evidence suggests a role for microbiome alterations in the occurrence of BOS, although the precise mechanisms are unclear. In this study we evaluated the relationship between the airway microbiome and distinct subsets of immunoregulatory myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in LTRs.
·jhltonline.org·
Distal airway microbiome is associated with immunoregulatory myeloid c (...)
Do Antibiotics Cause Celiac Disease - YouTube
Do Antibiotics Cause Celiac Disease - YouTube
Do Antibiotics Cause Celiac Disease? Some researchers say yes they can. Especially in those with genetic susceptibility to gluten sensitivity. Antibiotics cause a yeast overgrowth, and emerging research shows that yeast - AKA candida, can create a protein that mimics gluten, causing an intestinal reaction leading to the development of celiac disease. To connect with Dr. Osborne visit: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DoctorPeterO... Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/docosborne/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drosborne Twitter: https://twitter.com/glutenology *These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This video is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. It is strictly intended for educational purposes only. Additionally, this information is not intended to replace the advice of your physician. Dr. Osborne is not a medical doctor. He does not treat or diagnose disease. He offers nutritional support to people seeking an alternative from traditional medicine. Dr. Osborne is licensed with the Pastoral Medical Association.
·youtube.com·
Do Antibiotics Cause Celiac Disease - YouTube
Donor microbes persist two years after fecal transplant to treat C. di (...)
Donor microbes persist two years after fecal transplant to treat C. di (...)
Researchers have made the first direct demonstration that fecal donor microbes remained in recipients for months or years after a transplant to treat the diarrhea and colitis caused by recurrent Clostridium difficile infections -- a serious and stubborn cause of diarrhea after an antibiotic treatment for some other illness.
·sciencedaily.com·
Donor microbes persist two years after fecal transplant to treat C. di (...)
Dr Russel Jaffe - Healthy digestion = healthy microbiome - YouTube
Dr Russel Jaffe - Healthy digestion = healthy microbiome - YouTube
Healthy digestion within a resilient, repair-enabled microbiome is essential for 21st century survival. The human microbiome will be explained in functional and practical terms. Issues such as leaky gut, SIBO and IBS will be explored.Those who are proactive about their health, particularly about what they eat and drink, think and do can achieve a healthy microbiome. Eating and drinking what can be digested, assimilated and eliminated without immune burden provides a context for this presentation.
·youtube.com·
Dr Russel Jaffe - Healthy digestion = healthy microbiome - YouTube
Effect of Sucralose (Splenda) on the Microbiome - YouTube
Effect of Sucralose (Splenda) on the Microbiome - YouTube
What effect do artificial sweeteners such as sucralose (Splenda), saccharin (Sweet & Low), aspartame (Nutrasweet) and acesulfame K (Sweet One) have on our gut bacteria? Subscribe to NutritionFacts.org’s free newsletter to receive our B12 infographic that covers the latest research takeaways and Dr. Greger’s updated recommendations: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe/ Can’t get enough of artificial sweeteners? Check out • Diet Soda and Preterm Birth (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/diet-soda-and-preterm-birth/) • Aspartame Induced Fibromyalgia (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/aspartame-induced-fibromyalgia/) • Aspartame and the Brain (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/Aspartame-and-the-Brain) Even for nontoxic low calorie sweeteners like erythritol (Erythritol May Be a Sweet Antioxidant http://nutritionfacts.org/video/erythritol-may-be-a-sweet-antioxidant/), there are some caveats. See: • How Diet Soda Can Make Us Gain Weight (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/how-diet-soda-could-make-us-gain-weight/) • Neurobiology of Artificial Sweeteners (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/neurobiology-of-artificial-sweeteners/) • Unsweetening the Diet (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/unsweetening-the-diet/) Who cares if our gut flora gets disrupted? Wait until you see how important the little puppies are: • Microbiome: The Inside Story (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/microbiome-the-inside-story) • Prebiotics: Tending Our Inner Garden (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/prebiotics-tending-our-inner-garden) • What’s Your Gut Microbiome Enterotype? (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/whats-your-gut-microbiome-enterotype) • How to Change Your Enterotype (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/how-to-change-your-enterotype) • Paleopoo: What We Can Learn from Fossilized Feces (http://nutritionfacts.org/video/paleopoo-what-we-can-learn-from-fossilized-feces) Have a question for Dr. Greger about this video? Leave it in the comment section at http://nutritionfacts.org/video/effect-of-sucralose-splenda-on-the-microbiome and he'll try to answer it! Image Credit: Dave Crosby via Flickr. https://NutritionFacts.org • Subscribe: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe • Donate: https://nutritionfacts.org/donate • Podcast : https://nutritionfacts.org/audio • Facebook: www.facebook.com/NutritionFacts.org • Twitter: www.twitter.com/nutrition_facts • Instagram: www.instagram.com/nutrition_facts_org • Books (including the NEW How Not to Diet Cookbook): https://nutritionfacts.org/books • Shop: https://drgreger.org
·youtube.com·
Effect of Sucralose (Splenda) on the Microbiome - YouTube
Excess dietary zinc worsens C. diff infection -- ScienceDaily
Excess dietary zinc worsens C. diff infection -- ScienceDaily
The consumption of dietary supplements and cold therapies containing high concentrations of zinc is now being called into question, following research that suggests it may worsen Clostridium difficile infection.
·sciencedaily.com·
Excess dietary zinc worsens C. diff infection -- ScienceDaily
Exercise changes gut microbial composition independent of diet, team r (...)
Exercise changes gut microbial composition independent of diet, team r (...)
Two studies - one in mice and the other in human subjects - offer the first definitive evidence that exercise alone can change the composition of microbes in the gut. The studies were designed to isolate ...
·medicalxpress.com·
Exercise changes gut microbial composition independent of diet, team r (...)
Fecal Transplants for Allergies, Autism, and Autoimmune Disease
Fecal Transplants for Allergies, Autism, and Autoimmune Disease
At first glance, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) appears to be a far-fetched procedure devised as a slapstick plot for a sit-com series. However, this innovative technique may revolutionize the future of medical treatments for a host of maladies including autoimmune and allergic diseases as well as autism spectrum disorder.
·greenmedinfo.com·
Fecal Transplants for Allergies, Autism, and Autoimmune Disease