Do
you remember the “hygiene hypothesis” of the late 1990s? It theorized
that humans had so over-sanitized their environment with disinfectants
and hand cleansers, our immune systems were no longer doing their jobs.
So many consumer products like toothpaste, hand and dish soap, laundry
detergents and even clothes now include antibiotics, said the theory, we
seldom encounter the “bad” germs our immune systems are supposed to
recognize and fight.
Since the hygiene hypothesis
surfaced, there is growing evidence of its truth. In fact the theory
that certain medical conditions, especially autoimmune ones, may be
caused by a changing or declining bacterial environment in the human gut
is gaining momentum and now called the “disappearing microbiota
hypothesis.”
Still,
the most astounding research that is developing around the microbiome
is the ability of our gut bacteria to affect our brain and “influence
our mood and temperament,”
says food expertMichael
Pollan. “If you transplant the gut microbiota of relaxed and
adventurous mice into the guts of timid and anxious mice they become
less stressed and more adventurous.”
Here are some conditions which could be linked to the state of your gut bacteria.
1. Asthma
One
of the most detested microbes in the Western world is H. pylori which
causes both acute and chronic gastritis and peptic ulcers and is highly
correlated with gastrointestinal-related cancers. But even as antibiotic
treatment has reduced and almost eliminated H. pylori in the gut of
many humans in Western countries, there is a downside to H. pylori
eradication. In the same time frame that “H. pylori infection rates have
dropped from > 50% at the beginning of the 20th century to < 10%
at its end…the incidence of many immune disorders has increased at an
alarming rate,” says a 2012 paper in the journal Gut Microbes.
“Among these are allergic diseases such as hay fever, eczema, and
asthma, but also auto-immune diseases (multiple sclerosis, type I
diabetes) and chronic inflammatory conditions such as inflammatory bowel
disease.” Asthma is especially on the increase, say epidemiologists,
growing by 28 percent in all US adults in the last decade and 50 percent
in African-American children. Now researchers are asking whether H.
pylori had provided asthma protection such as suppression of allergic
airway disease and other immunomodulatory properties and whether the
microbe could be harnessed for asthma prevention and treatment.
2. Obesity
There
is only one affliction that seems to be growing as fast in the US
population as asthma, and that’s obesity. The waning influence of H.
pylori may also be a factor. In some countries less
than 10 percent of school children
now carry H. pylori anymore, say researchers, and “at the same time,
the incidence of obesity among the same population group has been
observed.” H. pylori influences the hormones leptin and ghrelin, both of
which affect weight and body mass. The increase in obesity also
correlates with the indiscriminate use of antibiotics on factory farms,
says a paper in
Frontiers of Public Health and
cannot be fully explained by “excess food energy intake, changes in
diet and eating behavior” and increasing sedentary lifestyles.
Antibiotics likely increase weight in livestock by
strengthening microbes that absorb nutrients,
so why would they not increase human weight in the same way? Both obese
mice and humans have lost weight when the intestinal microbes of lean
mice and humans were inserted
into their systems. And there is another environmental source of antibiotics. Triclosan, found in products like
Colgate’s Totaland Ajax and Dawn dish detergent is an antibiotic that also acts as an endocrine-disrupting
pesticide. Traces of it have been found in
earthworms from agricultural fields and
Atlantic dolphins. Endocrine disrupters like Triclosan are also suspected of causing
early pubertyby impairing hormonal regulation.
3. Mood Disorders
Could
the microbes in your gut—or lacking in your gut—actually affect your
mood? Yes, say several studies in medical journals, which link gut
microbes to depression, anxiety, stress, mood disorders, and even
eating and sleep disorders!
Cross-reacting chemicals may provide a link between your brain and your
gut and “Alteration of this link may contribute to several
neuropsychiatric disorders, emphasizing the key role of nutrition among
other factors influencing gut content and intestinal permeability,” says
an article in the journal
Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition & Metabolic Care. Gut bacteria influence the behavior of serotonin, dopamine and GABA—three substances many psychiatric drugs target. Many
recent studies in
scientific journals
are exploring the link between your brain and gut, now referred to as
the “microbiota-gut-brain axis.” “The expression ‘thinking with your
gut’ may contain a larger kernel of truth than we thought,” writes
Michael Pollan. Depression may also be caused by another action in the
gut, inflammatory responses says
another paper in
the scientific literature which postulates that is why it is so “common
in the context of autoimmune and inflammatory diseases.”
4. Acne
Remember
the old explanation for acne—that it was caused by chocolate, fried
foods or pizza? Increasingly, scientists are linking acne to what’s
going on in the gut, so maybe the original theories had a kernel of
truth. While acne has traditionally been treated with antibiotics to
kill the “bad” bacteria, the idea of adding “good” bacteria in the
form of probiotics is
now gaining favor. It is a “gentler and more effective way to ease
problem skin,” says Huiying Li of the David Geffen School of Medicine at
the University of California, Los Angeles. Researchers know now that
not all bacteria linked to acne are bad. Some may cause problem skin,
but other appear to protect the skin and keep it healthy and the latter
may have genes that may even fight the former, researchers now suspect. A
2013 study in
Journal of Cutaneous Medicine and Surgery suggests that probiotics “may be considered a therapeutic option or adjunct for acne vulgaris” and an article in
Gut Pathogens agrees
that gut bacteria “have important implications in acne.” The research
is so promising, a project at the Genome Institute at
Washington University is
now underway “to investigate the relationship between acne and the
microbiome, or community of microbes, residing underneath the surface of
the human skin.”
5. Childhood Disorders
Research
is still preliminary, but gut bacteria may also play a role in
childhood problems. James Greenblatt, a psychiatrist and clinical
faculty member at Tufts Medical School, successfully treated a teenager
with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder by boosting her “good” bacteria with high-powered
probiotics reported
ABC news.
Symptoms begin to subside after six months and after a year, they had
disappeared and the patient had recovered. Studies have also found a
byproduct of one gut bacterium elevated in
autistic children.
“Researchers need to complete additional studies to confirm the
existence of abnormalities in autistic individuals intestines,” said an
article in
Alternative Therapies In Health And Medicine. The
gut bacteria of a mother may even affect her baby. Researchers now
suspect the reason babies born by C-section are more likely to be
overweight or obese by
the time they are adults is because they are deprived of important
bacteria from the mother during the birth process. “Members of the
mother’s gut microbiota are transferred to the child during vaginal
delivery,”
say researchers and “caesarian section leads to an altered colonization pattern of the infant’s lower intestine.”
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