Mental Connect: A significant aspect of good gut health is, believe it or not, tied to mental wellness. Expert opinions state that the gut is our ‘second brain’. A healthy gut can control appetite and weight, moderate metabolism, enhance the absorption of vital nutrients, help manage anxiety, depression, irritable bowel syndrome, and prevent several neurological disorders.
There is a definite connection between gut health and the brain, as evidenced by the increased risk of Parkinson’s disease, autism, anxiety, and depression amongst those with gut dysbiosis (increase in bad bacteria over good bacteria). Even your happy hormones are produced in your gut and transported to the brain. The axis from your gut to your brain is a pivotal one, so if you have an inflamed gut, the transport of good hormones and necessary neurotransmitters from your gut to your brain breaks down like a barricaded highway.
Immune Fix: Today, people worldwide are afflicted with infections and environmental pollution, compromising the body’s immune system. It would help if you had a vast diversity of good gut flora in your intestine to maintain good gut health. After all, we are only ten percent human; the rest of us is all microbes.
Taking care of all the little buddies inside us is paramount to keep our body at its highest caliber. So, keep junk foods, refined grains, excess sugar, and salt at bay. Eat more vegetables, fruits, fermented non-grain foods, and fats that increase the short-chain fatty acids production in the gut.
Another term you must know when talking about gut health is ‘dysbiosis’, which is the imbalance in the gut’s microbe composition (overgrowth of pathogenic bacteria overwhelming the helpful ones) and the root cause of many human diseases. In the current period, a majority of patients in the gastric and surgical outpatient departments are suffering from ‘dysbiosis’. Dysbiosis has been associated with many conditions – from irritable bowel syndrome, inflammatory bowel diseases, colorectal cancer to obesity, other metabolic disorders, to even autism.