Doctors are trained to identify
diseases by where they are located. If you have asthma it’s considered a lung
problem; if you have rheumatoid arthritis, it must be a joint problem; if you
have acne, doctors see it as a skin problem; if you are overweight you must
have a metabolism problem; if you have allergies, immune imbalance is blamed.
Doctors who understand health this way are both right and wrong. Sometimes the
causes of your symptoms do have some relationship to their location, but that’s
far from the whole story.
By understanding disease in the 21st
century, our old ways of defining illness based on symptoms is not very useful.
Instead, by understanding the origins of
disease and the way in which the body operates as one whole, integrated
ecosystem we now know that symptoms appearing in one area of the body may be
caused by imbalances in an entirely different system.
If your skin is bad or you have
allergies, can’t seem to lose weight, suffer from an autoimmune disease or
allergies, struggle with fibromyalgia, or have recurring headaches, the real
reason may be that your gut is unhealthy. This may be true even if you have
never had any digestive complaints.
There are many other possible
imbalances in your body’s operating system that may drive illness as well.
These include problems with hormones, immune function, detoxification, energy production,
and more.
Let’s take a deeper look at the gut and why it may be at the root of
your chronic symptoms.
Symptoms Throughout the Body are Resolved
by Treating the Gut
Ulcerative Colitis
Many today do have digestive
problems including reflux or heartburn, irritable bowel, bloating,
constipation, diarrhea and colitis. In fact, belly problems account for over
200 million doctor’s visits and billions in health care costs annually. But gut
problems cause disease far beyond the gut. Patients with colitis could
also have inflamed joints and eyes, and that patients with liver failure could
be cured of delirium by taking antibiotics that killed the toxin-producing
bacteria in their gut. Could it be that when things are not quite right
down below it affects the health of our entire body and many diseases we
haven’t linked before to imbalances in the digestive system?
The answer is a resounding yes.
Normalizing gut function is one of the most important things doctors can do for
patients, and it’s so simple. The “side effects” of treating the gut are quite
extraordinary. Patients find relief from allergies, acne, arthritis, headaches,
autoimmune disease, depression, attention deficit, and more—often after years
or decades of suffering. Here are a few examples of the results achieved by
addressing imbalances in the function and flora of the gut:
- A 58-year-old woman with many years of worsening allergies, asthma, and sinusitis who was on frequent antibiotics and didn’t respond to any of the usual therapies was cured by eliminating a worm she harbored in her gut called Strongyloides.
- A 52-year-old woman who suffered with daily headaches and frequent migraines for years, found relief by clearing out the overgrowth of bad bugs in her small intestine with a new non-absorbed antibiotic called Xifaxin.
- A six-year-old-girl with severe behavioral problems including violence, disruptive behavior in school, and depression was treated for bacterial yeast overgrowth, and in less than 10 days her behavioral issues and depression were resolved.
- A three-year-old boy with autism started talking after treating a parasite called Giardia in his gut.
These are not miracle cures, but
common results that occur when you normalize gut function and flora through
improved diet, increased fiber intake, daily probiotic supplementation, enzyme
therapy, the use of nutrients that repair the gut lining, and the direct
treatment of bad bugs in the gut with herbs or medication.
A number of recent studies have made
all these seemingly strange reversals in symptoms understandable.
Let’s review
them.
Research Linking Gut Flora and
Inflammation to Chronic Illness
Scientists compared gut flora or
bacteria from children in Florence, Italy who ate a diet high in meat, fat, and
sugar to children from a West African village in Burkina Faso who ate beans,
whole grains, vegetables, and nuts. The bugs in the guts of the African
children were healthier, more diverse, better at regulating inflammation and
infection, and better at extracting energy from fiber. The bugs in the guts of
the Italian children produced by-products that create inflammation; promote
allergy, asthma, and autoimmunity; and lead to obesity.
Why is this important?
In the West, our increased use of
vaccinations, antibiotics, and enhancements in hygiene have led to health
improvements for many. Yet these same factors have dramatically changed the
ecosystem of bugs in our gut, and this has a broad impact on health that is
still largely unrecognized. There are trillions of bacteria in
your gut and they collectively contain at least 100 times as many genes as you
do. The bacterial DNA in your gut outnumbers your own DNA by a very large
margin. This bacterial DNA controls immune function, regulates digestion and
intestinal function, protects against infections, and even produces vitamins
and nutrients.
Can bacteria in the gut actually
affect the brain? They can. Toxins, metabolic by-products, and inflammatory
molecules produced by these unfriendly bacteria can all adversely impact the
brain.
When the balance of bacteria in your
gut is optimal this DNA works for you to great effect. For example, some good
bacteria produce short chain fatty acids. These healthy fats reduce
inflammation and modulate your immune system. Bad bugs, on the other hand,
produce fats that promote allergy and asthma, eczema and inflammation
throughout your body.
Another recent study found that the
bacterial fingerprint of gut flora of autistic children differs dramatically
from healthy children. Simply by looking at the byproducts of their intestinal
bacteria (which are excreted in the urine—a tested regularly in a practice
called organic acids testing), researchers could distinguish between autistic
and normal children.
Think about this: Problems with gut
flora are linked to autism. Can bacteria in the gut actually affect the brain?
They can. Toxins, metabolic by-products, and inflammatory molecules produced by
these unfriendly bacteria can all adversely impact the brain.
Autoimmune diseases are also linked
to changes in gut flora. A recent study showed that children who use
antibiotics for acne may alter normal flora, and this, in turn, can trigger
changes that lead to autoimmune disease such as inflammatory bowel disease or
colitis.
The connections between gut flora
and system-wide health don’t stop there. A recent study in the New England
Journal of Medicine found that you could cure or prevent delirium and brain
fog in patients with liver failure by giving them an antibiotic called Xifaxan
to clear out bugs that produce toxins their poor livers couldn’t detoxify.
Toxins from bacteria were making them insane and foggy. Remove the bacteria
that produce the toxins, and their symptoms clear up practically overnight.
Other similar studies have found
that clearing out overgrowth of bad bugs with a non-absorbed antibiotic can be
an effective treatment for restless leg syndrome and fibromyalgia.
Even obesity has been linked to
changes in our gut ecosystem that are the result of a high-fat, processed,
inflammatory diet. Bad bugs produce toxins called lipopolysaccardies (LPS) that
trigger inflammation and insulin resistance or pre-diabetes and thus promote
weight gain.
Remarkable, but the little critters
living inside of you have been linked to everything from autism to obesity,
from allergy to autoimmunity, from fibromyalgia to restless leg syndrome, from
delirium to eczema to asthma. In fact the links between chronic illness and gut
bacteria keep growing every day.
So what can you do to keep your gut
flora balanced, your gut healthy, and thus overcome or avoid these health
problems?
Six Steps to a Healthy Gut (and a
Healthy Body!)
Follow these five simple steps to
begin re-balancing your gut flora.
- Eat a fiber–rich, whole foods diet—it should be rich in beans, nuts, seeds, whole grains, fruits, and vegetables—all of which feed good bugs.
- Limit sugar, processed foods, animal fats, and animal protein—these provide food for unhealthy bugs.
- Avoid the use of antibiotics, acid blockers, and anti-inflammatories—they change gut flora for the worse.
- Take probiotics daily—these healthy, friendly flora can improve your digestive health and reduce inflammation and allergy.
- Use Herbalife products that counteract with cleansing and take preventive measures against diseases and bacteria.
- Consider specialized testing—such as organic acid testing, stool testing (new tests can look at the DNA of the bacteria in your gut), and others to help assess your gut function. You will likely have to work with a functional medicine practitioner to effective test and treat imbalances in your gut.
And if you have a chronic illness,
even if you don’t have digestive symptoms, you might want to consider what is
living inside your gut. Tending to the garden within can be the answer to many
seemingly unrelated health problems.
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