Let’s embrace the fact that we are not alone in our bodies. Our trillions of microbial residents play a crucial role in shaping our overall health and well-being.
Alma mater: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Ads for probiotic supplements are everywhere you turn these days, and they promise you everything under the sun. They will balance your “good” and “bad” gut bacteria, improve depression or anxiety, help you lose weight, reduce inflammation, lower cholesterol—the list goes on. Are all these claims true? Are some of them true? Are any of them based on rigorous scientific inquiry?
The money spent on marketing probiotics, the number of individuals using them, and the technology to better understand the human microbiome have all increased dramatically in the 21st century. What an exciting time for research and a hopeful era for new ways to cure disease. But, as with any new area of inquiry, the field of gut microbiome science is fertile soil for pseudoscience, exaggeration, and unscrupulous marketing. How can the consumer tell what information is based on solid science, and what is the magic pill of wishful thinking?
In the 12 fascinating lectures of Gut Health Explained, Dr. Gabrielle Fundaro shares the latest scientific knowledge about the trillions of organisms that live in your gut. Humans have coevolved with this gut microbiota for such a long time that the microbiome interacts with every system in your body. It produces useful compounds that nourish intestinal cells, support metabolic health, protect against certain types of cancer, influence brain activity, and support the immune system—in fact, you might be surprised to learn that the gut contains about 70 percent of the body’s immune tissues and cells.
Each of us has a microbiome composition as unique as our fingerprints, made up of trillions of microorganisms. In this course, you’ll learn how to navigate the evolving landscape of gut microbiome science while gaining a deep understanding of the intricate interplay between you and your microbiome.
Do You Have a Healthy Gut?
Scientists agree that one of the most important questions in microbiome science is also one of the most elusive to answer: What constitutes a healthy gut? In 2012, the International Life Sciences Institute’s North American Gut Microbiome Committee commissioned a review to answer that seemingly straightforward question. At the time, they concluded that a healthy gut microbiome couldn’t be defined by one single, idealized composition.
More than a decade later, the question still hasn’t been answered. The exact species and quantities of yeasts, bacteria, protists, archaea, unicellular eukaryotes, and viruses that live in each person’s gut are determined by genetics, diet, disease, climate, and many more factors. Trying to explain the best gut microbiome by quantifying species distribution is trying to define a system with literally trillions of constantly moving parts—not all of which have yet been fully identified—is like trying to understand the population dynamics of a metropolis based on a single photograph.
Instead, recognizing that everyone is interested in “gut health,” even though no one can define exactly what that is—and accepting that plenty of healthy people have vastly different microbiomes—Dr. Fundaro has developed a functional approach. In this course, you’ll learn about the “Three Ds of Gut Health.” A healthy body will function well in the following categories:
Your Gut Microbiome vs. Disease
In the last 15 years, scientists have learned that the relationship between the microbiome and the rest of the body is far more complex than originally thought. As a result of that complexity and lack of detail below the species level, researchers have not yet established any strict cause-and-effect relationships between the gut microbiome and any specific aspect of health or disease. Nevertheless, interesting patterns have emerged with respect to several diseases, including:
Is It Science Or Pseudoscience?
It’s not surprising that gut health supplements are selling like mad these days. Given that more than 50,000 articles about the human microbiome have been published in the past 15 years alone, almost everyone has heard about this exciting new field. Unfortunately, the truth is that those 50,000 articles have produced more questions than answers—due to both the complexity of the human microbiome and the necessarily methodical pace of true science. But that’s not stopping the unscrupulous from selling products related to the microbiome. How can you tell if an article or a product is based on scientific evidence?
In this course, you’ll learn about several tell-tale signs of pseudoscience, including:
As Gut Health Explained illustrates, huge strides have been made in recent years in this relatively new science. And even without the answers about concrete causative relationships we hope to have in the near future, the field has already provided exciting new avenues to support your overall health.
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