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Your Gut Might Control Your Organs By
Dr. Al
Sears Think
about the ways we use the word gut. We
use
our “gut” to describe a lot of the things we feel. You need to have
guts to try
something new... you can bust a gut laughing... your gut tells you when
something is right.
For
example, a brand new study finds that your “gut” may control your
organs. What
happens in your gut appears to activate your liver, and benefit your
kidneys,
colon, digestive tract, blood plasma, metabolism and reproductive
system. More
on
the study in a minute, but first, let me explain what makes this
possible. Inside
your digestive system there are millions of little workers that are
very busy
protecting you. They keep you from getting infections, and help you
digest your
food and turn it into vitamins. They’re
tiny microorganisms called “flora.” You get them at birth, and they
stay with
you your whole life. Your
flora stay ready in your gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts to
help
activate your immune system. They
are
experts at killing the deadly bacteria that can get into your body
through the
air and your food such as E coli, salmonella and strep. There
are
400 different types of friendly little workers in your gut, and you may
have
heard of a few of them. One,
called H. pylori, keeps your hunger in check so you
don’t get fat. Two
others, L. acidophilus and B. bifidus,
seem to give you the most
benefit. They can help rebuild your population of other types of
friendly gut
flora. And these two may also produce such B vitamins as niacin, folic
acid,
biotin, and B6, as well as vitamin K. Without
these vitamins, you wouldn’t be able to stay calm and relaxed, have
strong
bones, clear arteries, a sharp memory, normal hormones, or energy to
get
through the day. If
you’re
a woman, you have flora in your reproductive tract, too. It makes
lactic acid
that protects you from such infectious yeasts as candida. But
the
new study takes the benefits of flora to another level. Researchers
found that these millions of hard workers do even more than they
thought. They
took
mice that had no flora at all and put them in an environment where they
could
build up normal levels. They planned to study them for 20 days. It
only
took 5 days for the mice to fill out to a normal size. And their livers
started
to properly turn sugars and starches into energy. The flora also
strongly
stimulated an enzyme needed to keep cholesterol levels normal.1 In
fact,
the flora had a positive effect on every organ and body system the
researchers
looked at. And
these
microorganisms might be some of the best defenders and allies we have
against
the lightning-fast changes forced on our bodies by the modern world. Scientists
are even starting to use flora like this to help plants biodegrade
different
kinds of pollution.2 I
always
knew the flora in your gut were a vital part of your metabolism and
good
health, which is why I seldom prescribe antibiotics in my practice. Antibiotics
wipe out all the flora in your gut so you lose the
protection they give
you. And it’s especially dangerous to overuse antibiotics. Overuse has
created
“superbugs” that your flora can no longer protect you from. Healthy
flora is also one of the reasons I recommend eating grass-fed beef. Because
of the drive for profit in the cattle industry, ranchers have switched
from
feeding the animals their native diet of grass to feeding them cheap
grains,
corn, soy and wheat because that makes the animals very fat quickly.
But this
also makes the animals sick, so ranchers have to give them antibiotics
to keep
them alive. One
thing
I’ve found in my 20 years treating thousands of patients is that
prevention is
much easier than the cure. In
this
case, it’s much easier to keep your flora healthy than to try to build
it back
up after the modern world and Western diet destroy it all. So
here
are 4 steps to help protect you and increase your flora, so you can
have more
energy, stay lean, and prevent infections:
Probiotic
supplements help in two ways:
You
should try to get at least a billion microorganisms per day so you can
keep the
right amount of flora in your system. It will help you restore and
re-energize
the ecology of your gut. The
trick
is to find a probiotic that has live, viable microorganisms, with a
diverse mix
of species. Many
of
the average probiotics you’ll find will say they have “live organisms,”
and
they might have when the capsule was bottled. But the cheap ones won’t
have
used processes or packaging that promotes a long shelf life for the
flora. You
want
to either make sure you get the freshest package available, or spend a
little
more to get a better brand. To Your Good Health,
Sources [1]
Ricketts, Marie-Louise, et
al, "The Cholesterol-Raising Factor from Coffee Beans, Cafestol, as an
Agonist Ligand for the Farnesoid and Pregnane X Receptors," Molecular
Endocrinology 2007;21(7):1603-1616 Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
Health Supplements and You 2011