Common parasite found in gut actually keeps you healthy by fighting inflammation
Scientists report that a common parasite found in the gastrointestinal tract is associated with benefits for gut health.
Scientists report that a common parasite found in the gastrointestinal tract is associated with benefits for gut health.
A recent study may lead to new gut microbiome-based therapies to normalize function of the pancreas and GI tract hormones in obese diabetes patients.
Researchers reveal that a form of good cholesterol, known as HDL3, protects against liver inflammation by blocking inflammatory signals from gut bacteria.
New research points to how gut microbes and the brain are in constant communication to regulate appetite and body temperature.
Despite being a disease in the brain, new research suggests an unhealthy gut could lead to the development of Parkinson’s disease.
That may not be you who’s hungry. For the first time, research reveals that gut bacteria can control what we want to eat.
Researchers from the University of California-Riverside say eating too much fat and sugar as a child can permanently alter a person’s microbiome.
A direct and sex-specific association between the composition of an infant’s microbiome and early childhood behavioral health has been found by scientists at Dartmouth University
Scientists developed probiotics with a unique, edible coating that enables the beneficial bacteria to reach the intestine alive.
Antibiotics are helpful for treating bacterial infections, but their life-saving treatment effects come at the cost of ‘good’ gut microbes. To make matters worse, antibiotic treatment has increased the risk of being drug-resistant and developing inflammatory infections later on in life. To reduce the downside of antibiotics, researchers from MIT have devised bacterial strains that work to protect the gut.