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More and more people are prioritizing their gut health.
Whether to ease uncomfortable bloating or gas pain, promote regularity or simply build a robust gut microbiome, it’s increasingly recognized that the foods we eat influence digestive health and, in turn, our overall health.
Not surprisingly, supplements claiming to bolster gut health are proliferating on social media and online.
What does “gut health” actually mean?
Gut health is a popular but poorly understood term. It’s been widely accepted by bloggers and social media influencers, but there isn’t an agreed upon scientific definition.
Many experts define gut health by the absence of gastrointestinal symptoms (e.g., bloating, gas, abdominal pain, diarrhea, constipation) and disease (e.g., inflammatory bowel disease, colon cancer).
Gut health can also refer to having a greater diversity of microbial species in your gut microbiome, the community of trillions of bacteria and other micro-organisms that live inside your large intestine.
A diverse microbiome can help fend off illness-causing bacteria and viruses. And it’s thought to guard against asthma, inflammatory bowel disease, depression, obesity, type 2 diabetes and heart disease, among other conditions.
Do gut supplements live up to their hype?
While some supplements have decent evidence to back up their gut health claims, others don’t. Probiotic supplements, on the other hand, have been the focus of much research.
This doesn’t mean, though, that taking a one-a-day probiotic supplement is a fast-track to a healthy gut for people without gastrointestinal conditions.
While studies conducted in healthy people have shown that taking a probiotic supplement increases the amount of healthy bacteria in the gut, this may or may not be a good thing.
Probiotic supplements may have different effects in different people depending on their unique gut microbiome.
Research also suggests that taking a probiotic supplement after antibiotic treatment delays the return of the gut’s normal bacteria.
Small studies have shown that supplements of prebiotics, fibres that nourish good gut microbes, help treat constipation, regulate gut inflammation and beneficially alter gut microbiome composition.
How to promote a healthy gut
Diet is considered the most powerful tool that can alter the composition and activity of the gut microbiome.
A diet rich in whole grains, vegetables, fruits, nuts, seeds, beans and lentils provides prebiotic fibres, polyphenols and other compounds that nourish healthy gut bacteria. Fermented foods that contain probiotic bacteria are also thought to benefit gut health.
originally posted by: twistedpuppy
a reply to: Skywatcher2011
Ahh those miraculous pills that make your wallet lose weight!
I take probiotics whenever I'm forced to take antibiotics; that is extremely rarely. Generally, they are useless as your body expells them. To make it simpler: you just s*it them out, that's it.
Has anyone ever taking PROBIOTIC supplements before and what was/is your experience been like? Share your thoughts ATS!