Good gut bacteria = good mood? Study shows how your microbiome shapes your personality
Researchers report a variety of distinct bacteria and metabolomes in your gut actually have a connection to different personality traits.
Researchers report a variety of distinct bacteria and metabolomes in your gut actually have a connection to different personality traits.
Study authors suspect that the gut-brain axis may be responsible for this link between antibiotics and cognitive decline.
Classified as a behavior disorder, rumination syndrome is brought about by habitual regurgitation that becomes uncontrollable after a prolonged period of time.
Study results point to a promising future for opioids when it comes to treatment of inflammatory bowel disease and other gut ailments.
A new study finds that a touch-sensing protein called Piezo2 is the one responsible for the gut knowing when it’s time to move food down the digestive tract.
A recent study finds that the gut microbiome influences personality traits involved in mental and physical energy.
Only recently have researchers suspected a physiological link between eating and mating that starts from the gut.
New research finds that bacteria living in the gut have a way of traveling to the brain and rearranging brain cells involved in anxiety.
According to the survey of more than 50,000 people, around 11 percent of the global population frequently experiences abdominal pain when eating meals.
A recent mouse study finds that gut fungi interact with immune cells to protect against intestinal injury and infection.