A healthy gut microbiome might help people with IBD, but should probiotics

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A healthy gut microbiome might help people with IBD, but should probiotics.

The healthy microbiome: Building a barrier

The human intestinal microbiome is the vast community of trillions of helpful and harmful bacteria, viruses, fungi, and other microorganisms that inhabit our gut. Ideally, the lining of the gut acts as a barrier that prevents harmful bacteria and toxins from entering the bloodstream.

A healthy microbiome helps this lining block out harmful bacteria while enabling it to absorb nutrients. Beneficial bacteria in the microbiome promote a healthy, hospitable gut environment that limits inflammation and helps crowd out harmful bacteria.

Recent studies on human cells and in mice suggest. That a healthy microbiome produces substances that

  • nourish cells lining the colon, so that they form a tight barrier difficult for harmful bacteria to penetrate
  • interact with immune cells in the gut, reducing inflammation
  • prompt the gut lining to make mucus that acts as an additional barrier to harmful bacteria.

In animal studies, a healthy microbiome is essential to help build and maintain an effective barrier. Animals raised in the laboratory without a microbiome. Whose microbiome has been depleted by antibiotics, have intestinal linings that are easily damaged.

An unbalanced microbiome: Inflammation and damage

What happens if the microbiome doesn’t have a เว็บพนันออนไลน์ UFABET สมัครง่าย โปรโมชั่นมากมาย good balance of helpful and harmful bacteria? The gut lining may become increasingly permeable. That may allow potentially harmful bacteria and their toxins to cross into the intestinal tissue and then into the bloodstream, triggering inflammation that can damage the gut.