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Your gut, the super organ: how the microbiome affects your health

Daniela Schuster
29-3-2023
Translation: Megan Cornish

Not only do trillions of bacteria live in your intestines, which regulate your digestion and your immune system. There’s also hope in your gut, because the microbiome has the potential to heal diseases – from depression to cancer. However, microbiome self-tests for the intestine aren’t (yet) the solution.

Your gut, the super organ: connected to the brain via a «highway»

This is how the intestinal dwellers influence our entire metabolism, our organs and even our brain. Science also refers to this connection as the gut-brain axis (in German). The gut and brain communicate on this highway – which links the two organs – with the help of various messenger substances.

This includes substances produced by the bacteria entering the bloodstream via the intestinal wall. These include those that contribute to the production of neurologically active substances such as neurotransmitters serotonin and dopamine. So, it’s no wonder that the microbiome is also called the «super organ», when it can even influence thinking, behaviour and mood.

Intestinal flora: healthy diversity, healthy human

People with Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis – where the variety of microbial co-inhabitants is limited – know this from painful experience. But even those who have had diarrhoea after taking antibiotics have experienced it first-hand. This is because so-called broad-spectrum antibiotics are usually used, which make no distinction between friend and foe when it comes to intestinal bacteria.

Tip from Professor Scharl: next time, get a prescription for a probiotic, such as saccharomyces boulardii, in addition to the antibiotics. They stabilise the microbiome and support regeneration of the intestinal flora.

Feeding your gut

But it’s not just medication that affects your microbiome. «For example, there are also indications that our Western diet – little fibre, lots of animal fat and sugar – combined with stress and lack of exercise reduces the variety of intestinal germs,» says Scharl. Flatulence, digestive problems and other issues are the lesser evil in this case.

At the same time, bacteria multiply that produce trimethylamine, a substance that’s suspected of increasing the risk of arteriosclerosis and thus heart attack and stroke. For the sake of your microbiome, you should therefore make sure you have a balanced diet rich in fibre and grains with lots of fresh fruit and vegetables and maintain a healthy, relaxed lifestyle.

Gut microbiome changes: the cause or effect of many diseases?

«Studies show that the microbiota of patients with certain diseases differs from that of healthy people,» confirms Scharl. And the list of diseases associated with a changed microbiome is a long one, ranging from chronic inflammatory bowel diseases to allergies, rheumatism, diabetes, obesity (morbid obesity), depression, autism and neurological diseases such as multiple sclerosis.

However, it’s far from clear whether changes in the microbiome trigger these diseases or whether they’re a consequence of them. It could be both. «In addition, not all people who show certain deviations suffer from the associated ailments or will go on to suffer from them,» emphasises Scharl.

Still healthy or already ill?

Microbiome in the gut: hope for the medicine of the future

However, the majority of people attending the consultation hours come to get help with gastrointestinal complaints or questions about stool transplants, where the prepared stool of a healthy person is transferred to an ill person. «The procedure is used in patients with antibiotic refractory Clostridium difficile colitis and is very successful. But this is the only situation where we perform it,» says Michael Scharl.

In the future, he believes that research into the microbiome can provide many more possibilities for even more targeted therapeutic interventions and microorganisms in the digestive tract will play a major role in medicine in the future as a therapeutic agent.

Scharl hopes that diseases can be cured by changing the composition of intestinal flora or by replacing the bacteria reduced by illness. «The ideal treatment would be if patients could be given individually tailored bacterial cocktails or isolated metabolites in tablet form.»

This could happen in two to three years in the field of colon cancer. In experiments with mice suffering from cancer, T cells that kill the tumour were activated by orally administering the bacteria that are reduced in the intestines of cancer patients.

Header image: Shutterstock

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Daniela Schuster
Autorin von customize mediahouse
oliver.fischer@digitecgalaxus.ch

If my job didn't exist, I'd definitely invent it. Writing allows you to lead several lives in parallel. On one day, I'm in the lab with a scientist; on another, I'm going on a South Pole expedition with a researcher. Every day I discover more of the world, learn new things and meet exciting people. But don't be jealous: the same applies to reading!

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