The microbiome is
making steady progress into our medical system.
It is powerfully indicated as the key protocol for a wide range of
diseases. What we have learned already
is that improper balance in the gut is key to understanding autism, and mind
related issues generally. Add in
diabetes and its partner in heart disease and it is central to general good
health.
So it is not just
obesity but obesity is something we can now clearly target with appropriate
protocols that allow the fat to discharge without the body fighting back.
This science is been
pieced together now and it only seriously began in the past five years or
so. Works I am presently reading tells
me that it is reaching critical mass although a ways yet from total
acceptance. Right now it is the last
option after repeated medical failure.
Gut
bacteria 'may be obesity weapon'
By
James Gallagher
Health
and science reporter, BBC News
5 September 2013 Last updated at 14:14 ET
Bacteria living in our guts seem to be
affecting our waistlines and harnessing them could lead to new ways of shedding
the pounds, US research suggests.
The human body is teeming with thousands of
species of microbes that affect health.
A study showed that transplanting gut bacteria
from obese people into mice led to the animals gaining weight, while bacteria
from lean people kept them slim.
The findings were published in Science.
Researchers at the Washington University
School of Medicine, Missouri, took gut bacteria from pairs of twins - one
obese, one thin.
We don't dine alone, we dine with trillions of
friends - we have to consider the microbes which live in our gut”
Prof Jeffrey GordonWashington University School of Medicine
The bacteria were then put into mice which had
grown up in completely sterile environments and had no gut bacteria of their
own.
Mice with the obese twin's bacteria became
heavier and put on more fat than mice given bacteria from a lean twin - and it
was not down to the amount of food being eaten.
There were differences in the number and types
of bacteria species from the lean and obese twin.
Overall it seemed those from a lean twin were
better at breaking down fibre into short-chain fatty acids. It meant the body
was taking up more energy from the gut, but the chemicals were preventing fatty
tissue from building up and increased the amount of energy being burned.
One of the researchers, Prof Jeffrey Gordon,
told the BBC's Science in Action
programme: "We don't dine alone, we dine with
trillions of friends - we have to consider the microbes which live in our
gut."
However, the diet was also important for
creating the right conditions for the lean twin's bacteria to flourish. A
bacterial obesity therapy seems unlikely to work alongside a a diet of greasy
burgers.
Keeping both sets of mice in the same cage
kept them both lean if they were fed a low-fat, high-fibre diet. Mice are
coprophagic, meaning they eat each other's droppings, and the lean twin's
bacteria were passed into the mice which started with bacteria that should have
made them obese.
However, a high-fat, low-fibre diet meant the
mice still piled on the pounds.
Human therapies?
A human obesity treatment is unlikely to use
transplants of thousands of species of bacteria from lean people's guts as it
carries the risk of also transferring infectious diseases.
Instead a search for the exact mix of bacteria
which benefit weight - and the right foods to promote their growth - is more
likely.
Prof Gordon said the next steps in the field
would be "trying to figure out how general these effects are, what diet
ingredients may promote their beneficial activities and to look forward to a
time when food and the value of food is considered in light of the microbes
that live in our gut - that foods will have to be designed from the inside out
as well as from the outside in."
Commenting on the research, Prof Julian
Parkhill, from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said he expected a future
when manipulating bacteria was a part of obesity treatment.
"There's a lot of work to do, but this is
proof of concept that bacteria in the gut can modulate obesity in adults, but
it is diet-dependent," he said.
He added that changing bacteria was a
promising field for other diseases.
He told the BBC: "It's an exciting new
area, but I think we need to be careful in promoting it as a cure-all.
"It's clear in specific areas -
inflammatory bowel disease, obesity, Crohn's - the microbiome is going to be
important."
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