How Friendly Bacteria Avoid Immune Attack To Live Happily In The GutCatarina Amorim
Wider understanding How the bacteria in your gut may be shaping your waistline Sep 14th 2013 | NEW YORK |From the print edition A CALORIE is a calorie. Eat too many and spend too few, and you will become obese and sickly. This is the conventional wisdom. But increasingly, it looks too...
You have many bacteria in your body. In fact, you have more of them than you have cells. Most are good for you. The ones found in your gut not only help you digest foods, they work all over your body and can be good for your physical and mental health. 2/ 16 Gut Microbiome This...
Go with Your Gut: How Bacteria May Affect Mental HealthHealth, TechEarth, PlanetStrange, SpaceAnimals, NewsHuman, HistoryShop, NatureHealth, TechEarth, PlanetStrange, SpaceAnimals, News
Using a common gut bacteria Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, or BT for short, Martens' team began to look at the complex interaction between BT and viruses, by pitting them against each other in the lab. When challenged with viruses, or phages, collected from waste water, some of the bacteria we...
Bacteria breaking through the gated gut Salmonella causes about 1.35 million illnesses and 420 deaths in the United States every year. To infect someone, this pathogen needs to cross the gut-lining border. “When ingested, Salmonella find their way to the intestines. There, they are vastly outnu...
New research reveals a cellular mechanism by which good bacteria can help the gut stay healthy. The study, which appears in the journal Immunity, shows that good bacteria, or the microbiota, interact with both the epithelial cells lining the gut and cell
The nerve signals, hormones and bacteria in the gut are all responsible for sending communications from the ENS to the rest of the nervous system, and any disruption can send your body into a tailspin of declining health. With the average diet today consisting of loads of sugar, carbs, proc...
Increasing research into the gut microbiome has revealed new and emerging roles for the ‘good bacteria’ in our bodies, with the latest being a new study that shows how they can help the immune system attack cancer cells. Scientists at the Snyder Institute for Chronic Diseases, Cumming School...
Many people are familiar with the idea that gut bacteria are important for health. Given their location, you might assume that role is only about digestion. But evidence is mounting that the microbes in our intestines interact with our minds—and hearts—in significant ways. Gutbacteriahave been...