How does bowel health affect memory and longevity?
How does bowel health affect memory and longevity?
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have large amounts of good bacteria inside their intestines live longer, have a stronger memory, and are less susceptible to disease, according to a recent scientific study.
The good intestinal bacteria, called microbiomes, account for 57 percent of the cells in our bodies and affect everything from sleep to brain health, according to the Daily Mail website.
The researchers explained the results of the study, which was conducted in mice, that the difference in the quantity of good bacteria in the human body based on many factors beginning from birth If Caesarean delivery, the child gets less amount of good bacteria compared to children born naturally, and the treatment of antibiotics in Childhood kills a large number of these good bacteria.
Eating foods that promote intestinal health such as "yogurt and vegetables" does not improve the quality of good bacteria in the stomach, as it should be, so the child's health should be taken care of from the birth, Dr. Rob Knight, a professor of pediatrics at the University of California, Until puberty, by avoiding taking antibiotics unless necessary, and eating healthy foods.
How does bowel health affect memory and longevity?
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who have large amounts of good bacteria inside their intestines live longer, have a stronger memory, and are less susceptible to disease, according to a recent scientific study.
The good intestinal bacteria, called microbiomes, account for 57 percent of the cells in our bodies and affect everything from sleep to brain health, according to the Daily Mail website.
The researchers explained the results of the study, which was conducted in mice, that the difference in the quantity of good bacteria in the human body based on many factors beginning from birth If Caesarean delivery, the child gets less amount of good bacteria compared to children born naturally, and the treatment of antibiotics in Childhood kills a large number of these good bacteria.
Eating foods that promote intestinal health such as "yogurt and vegetables" does not improve the quality of good bacteria in the stomach, as it should be, so the child's health should be taken care of from the birth, Dr. Rob Knight, a professor of pediatrics at the University of California,

