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Gut issues often stem from dysbiosis, an imbalance in the gut microbiome. This microbiome comprises both beneficial and pathogenic microbes. When this balance is disrupted, dysbiosis occurs. Dysbiosis can cause various health problems, ranging from fatigue and weakened immunity to chronic conditions like irritable bowel syndrome, Crohn's disease, or asthma.

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A healthy gut produces digestive enzymes, maintains gut lining integrity, crowds out harmful bacteria, and trains the immune system. Seventy percent of the immune system resides in the gut. A healthy gut also neutralizes cancer-causing compounds, produces vitamins K and B, metabolizes hormones and medications, and can turn genes on and off. Leaky gut can lead to autoimmune diseases, obesity, diabetes, fatty liver disease, cancers, dementia, heart disease, and arthritis.

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Poor gut health symptoms include low energy and skin issues, which are often fungal-related and linked to the gut microbiome. The gut contains good and bad bacteria, with an ideal balance of about 15% bad bacteria. However, herbicides, pesticides, processed foods, and gluten can kill good bacteria, leading to an overgrowth of bad bacteria. If the liver, kidneys, and colon can't process the excess bad bacteria, it manifests through the skin. The skin reflects the health of the gut, mirroring what is consumed. Therefore, one can assess gut health by observing the skin and bowel movements.

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Transcript emphasizes that the liver, not the digestive tract, should be the first check for digestive issues: 'The number one place is not to look to your digestive tract' and 'The very first place that we need to look is actually your liver.' It explains that 'Your gallbladder, if you still have one, is attached to your liver' and that 'Your liver makes something called bile and then that bile gets excreted or pumped out into your small intestine' after food leaves the stomach. It notes the liver's central role, citing 'I have called the liver the most overworked, underpaid organ in the entire body for many many years.' It lists indicators to look at: 'ALT, AST, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, albumin' and mentions liver-active hours 'between two and 4AM.' It ends with 'For more info, click the link below.'

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When we take Ibuprofen, it damages the tight junctions in the gut lining, leading to a leak of information into the immune system. Chronic use can cause dysfunction between the immune system and bacteria, leading to infections. This cycle undermines the gut-brain barrier and sense of self identity. Our brain is a result of this communication.

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Early warning signs of leaky gut include gas, bloating, bad breath, and unhealthy poop (not the classic s-shaped dark sinker, but little balls indicating constipation or diarrhea). To address leaky gut: limit caffeine and alcohol intake and drink more water. Fix leptin and insulin resistance, as high insulin decreases vitamin C, which is important for gut collagen integrity. Reduce EMF exposure from cell phones and Wi-Fi, as it disrupts gut functioning and the microbiome.

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A healthy gut produces digestive enzymes, maintains gut lining integrity, crowds out harmful bacteria, and trains the immune system. Seventy percent of the immune system resides in the gut. A healthy gut also neutralizes cancer-causing compounds, produces vitamins K and B, metabolizes hormones and medications, and can turn genes on and off. Leaky gut can lead to autoimmune diseases, obesity, diabetes, fatty liver disease, cancers, dementia, heart disease, and arthritis.

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Probiotic foods. I just mentioned this. The friendly flora greatly supports the liver. If you were exposed to an antibiotic or something to destroy your good flora, the liver suffers. If you're exposed to something like aspartame or some other synthetic artificial sweetener, that alters the gut microbiome, which then raises liver enzymes and puts you at risk for a fatty liver. Probiotic foods. I just mentioned this. The friendly flora greatly supports the liver. If you were exposed to an antibiotic or something to destroy your good flora, the liver suffers. If you're exposed to something like aspartame or some other synthetic artificial sweetener, that alters the gut microbiome, which then raises liver enzymes and puts you at risk for a fatty liver.

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"Often overlooked root cause of chronic low energy levels and fatigue is an overburdened sluggish liver." "Two of the main things that our livers get overburdened with are viruses and heavy metals." "it's going to start spilling out into our system." "So viruses create viral byproducts." "These byproducts spill out of our liver and goes into our system." "It causes our brain to become very inflamed." "One of the symptoms it can cause is this form of low energy and chronic fatigue." "The inflammation can affect our adrenal glands." "There can be some adrenal weakening going on from inflammation but actually the root cause was from the overburdened liver."

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So your body actually recycles bile because it is vitally necessary and important. In fact, it recycles it six to 10 times every single day. And on top of that, your liver makes bile. It's called primary bile salts and your microbiome makes bile. It's called secondary bile salts. Also, bile helps prevent SIBO small intestinal bacterial overgrowth. It competes for nutrients. There'll be less nutrients going into your small intestine because the microbes need them to survive. You're going to be deficient in nutrients. You're going to have a lot of gas, bloating, overgrowth of other pathogens, unfriendly bacteria. So bile salts have antimicrobial properties. So if you eat, especially like fiber or probiotics and you bloat, then chances are you can have SIBO.

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Common signs of gut inflammation include bloating, irregular bowel movements, fatigue, brain fog, even acne, and rosacea. You might also experience food sensitivities, sugar cravings, weakened immune system meaning you get sick often. Because almost 70% of your immune system lives in your gut, chronic inflammation can affect your ability to heal, recover, and feel your best. If you're noticing these signs consistently, it's worth looking into gut support, whether through diet, probiotics, or functional testing. My personal favorite is to eat probiotic rich foods like fermented foods. I particularly go to like things like kimchi, pickles, anything fermented. I've been kind of making my own fermented foods recently. It's definitely improved my gut overall well-being.

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Here are five surprising signs your gut health might be off. First, constant bloating and gas could indicate lactose intolerance or H. pylori infection. Second, changes in bowel habits, like alternating between constipation and diarrhea, could mean polyps or IBS. Third, food reactions could signal gluten or lactose intolerance. Fourth, uncontrolled sugar cravings can mean your gut microbiology is imbalanced. Fifth, struggling to lose weight could also indicate an imbalance in your gut microbiology.

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itchiness, especially in your feet fatigue or lethargy belly fat because the liver is filling up with fat and it's spilling off into areas around the organs and in the organs in your abdomen Diabetes and prediabetes and insulin resistance, which comes before both of those things. Hormonal imbalances, especially with estrogen, testosterone, which have all sorts of cascade issues from hair loss to menstrual cycle issues to menopausal problems. Many different types of skin problems occur because of the liver. Joint issues, like especially arthritis, stiffness, and the things related to the gallbladder, like belching, burping, bloating, gallstones, as well as hypothyroidism, because we need a healthy liver to convert at least 80% of the thyroid from T4, the inactive, to T3, the active form of the thyroid hormone.

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Serotonin, the happy hormone, is mostly produced in the gut, not the brain. Gut microbes influence serotonin production, affecting mood and bowel function. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) causes changes in bowel movements, abdominal pain, and is linked to mood disorders like depression and anxiety. This highlights the gut-brain connection, showing that IBS is more than just a digestive issue, but a disorder of the brain-gut axis.

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Leaky gut may be indicated by chronic gut issues like IBS, diarrhea, constipation, bloating, arthritis, joint pain, autoimmune disease, headaches, or hormonal issues. Autoimmune diseases are strongly linked. To heal leaky gut, follow the functional medicine "5 R program." First, remove bad bugs like yeast, bacteria overgrowth, and parasites, as well as irritating foods. Then, rebuild and repair the gut with sufficient fiber, ideally from vegetables. The gut benefits from polyphenols found in colorful fruits and vegetables, preferably organic. Consult EWG's guide to avoid the "dirty dozen" most contaminated produce. Treating leaky gut is critical for maintaining health.

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The rapid increase in autoimmune conditions and allergies is unlikely due to human genetics, which change over long periods. People with these conditions often have dysbiosis, a dysregulation of gut health characterized by reduced diversity, fewer healthful microbes, and more pathogenic microbes. While a causal relationship hasn't been established for all autoimmune conditions, mechanisms exist. Dysbiosis leads to a breakdown of the mucosal layer and separation of endothelial cells, which are held together by tight junctions. Butyrate, a short-chain fatty acid, helps maintain these tight junctions. The breakdown allows molecules, like bacterial endotoxins, to flow from the gut into the bloodstream, revving up the immune system. Increased inflammation leads to oxidative stress, causing DNA damage and accelerating tissue aging.

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Here are five surprising signs your gut health might be off. First, constant bloating and gas could indicate lactose intolerance or H. pylori infection. Second, changes in bowel habits, like alternating constipation and diarrhea, may signal polyps, growths, or IBS. Third, food reactions can mean gluten or lactose intolerance. Fourth, uncontrolled sugar cravings can mean your gut microbiology is imbalanced. Fifth, struggling to lose weight could also mean that your gut microbiology is out of balance.

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The speaker is conducting 61 clinical trials on the microbiome to understand its role in various diseases like diabetes, alopecia areata, pemphigoid disease, and lupus. These trials aim to map the microbiome in relation to these conditions, building upon previous experience with clinical protocols. A key observation is the presence of dysbiosis, or microbiome imbalance, which is linked to leaky gut. Stool is described as the body's first defense against ingested viruses, fungi, and parasites. When this barrier is compromised, microbes can pass from the colon to the blood vessels and nerves, secreting metabolites that travel to the brain and cause problems. This process is being linked to neurological conditions like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, MS, and ALS, where imbalanced microbes and fluctuating metabolites are believed to cause nerve damage.

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Are you having digestive issues? The number one place is not to look to your digestive tract. The liver has a profound digestive component to it. The gallbladder, if you still have one, is attached to your liver. Your liver makes something called bile and then that bile gets excreted or pumped out into your small intestine after your food leaves your stomach. If the liver is sluggish, digestion is the first task that it throws out the back door. The liver enzymes to look at: ALT, AST, bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, albumin. Not sleeping well between two and 4AM is described as a liver active time. For more info, click the link below.

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IBS is a sham diagnosis because it only describes symptoms without identifying the root cause. Many people diagnosed with IBS may actually have small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). SIBO occurs when gut bacteria overgrow in the upper gut, leading to gas, bloating, and other symptoms. Therefore, SIBO can be the cause of these issues, and individuals should consider treating SIBO instead of accepting an IBS diagnosis.

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When we take Ibuprofen, it damages the tight junctions in our gut lining, leading to a leaky gut. This disrupts the communication between our immune system and bacteria, causing infections. Chronic Ibuprofen use can further weaken this barrier, affecting our sense of self identity at a cellular level. This breakdown in communication can result in a dark cycle of health issues. Our brain's function is influenced by the communication between our gut bacteria and fungi, rather than being solely a human process.

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Leaky gut occurs when the gut's mucus layer and tight junctions break down, allowing toxins and bacteria to enter the bloodstream. In a healthy gut, tight junctions prevent leakage. A compromised gut can contribute to mental health issues like depression, anxiety, and ADHD, as well as skin problems, thyroid problems, colon problems like constipation, diarrhea, and irritable bowel syndrome, food sensitivities, and joint problems. Soluble fiber can help fix leaky gut by forming a gel that lines the gut walls. When microbes ferment fibers from whole veggies, fruits, herbs, and seeds, they produce short-chain fatty acids that heal and repair the gut. More information on healing the gut can be found on the speaker's TikTok page in the "gut health rabbit hole" playlist.

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Doctor Holland and Fasano at Harvard published a study that shows when humans eat wheat, every human that eats wheat, not just the celiacs, but every human that eats wheat gets tears in the inside lining of the gut every time they're going to disease. There’s a barrier between your bloodstream and your intestines called your gut lining, and your gut lining has microscopic holes in it. Over time, if somebody has intestinal inflammation, large holes open up in your gut lining. Some cells turn over very quickly; the inside lining of the gut has a new lining every three to seven days. So you had toast for breakfast, it heals; you have a sandwich for lunch, it heals; pasta for dinner, it heals; croutons on your salad, it heals; a cookie, but it heals day after week, after month, after year, after year, after year, until one day you don’t heal anymore. When you don’t heal, that’s pathogenic intestinal permeability, and these tears can occur and stay torn when you lose tolerance. You don’t heal anymore, whether you’re two years old, 22, or 72, it just depends on when you cross that threshold as to when this happens, but it happens. What can happen now is undigested food particles such as gluten, casein, toxins, bad bacteria, candida can leak from the intestines into the bloodstream. Your body says those shouldn’t be here. It starts this immune response, and if that isn’t corrected over time, it can start autoimmune disease, and systemic inflammation can affect the joints causing rheumatoid arthritis; it can affect the thyroid causing Hashimoto’s thyroiditis; it can affect the colon causing things like Crohn’s disease or the muscles causing fibromyalgia. So really all autoimmune disease is first caused by leaky gut. It starts in the gut lining. The biggest factors causing this gut reaction are: certain foods, refined grain products; sugar is a big one because sugar feeds candida and yeast in your body, which causes this issue. Genetically modified organisms are wired with pesticides and viruses, which kill off beneficial microbes in the gut, causing leaky gut and autoimmune disease. Also looking at hydrogenated oils; artificial sweeteners are a big one—all of these things contribute to leaky gut. So if you have any inflammatory condition or really any chronic condition, gluten should be at the top of your list in thinking about why, whether it’s an autoimmune disease, digestive disorders, depression, neurologic issues; many of these things are driven through gluten, and by doing an elimination diet you can often see the impact. We’ve seen athletes like Djokovic, who’s actually selling his career by removing inflammatory foods like gluten and dairy and sugar, and seeing him go from near the bottom of the pile of professional tennis players to number one and unbeatable.

The Dhru Purohit Show

These Are The TOP FOODS You Need To STOP EATING Today To FIX YOUR GUT! | Dr. Elroy Vojdani
Guests: Dr. Elroy Vojdani
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Dr. Elroy Vojdani discusses the interconnectedness of leaky gut and leaky brain, highlighting a 60-70% overlap in prevalence. He emphasizes that leaky gut is central to systemic immune issues and can lead to frequent infections and diminished metabolic reserves. Symptoms of leaky brain often manifest subtly in middle-aged individuals, such as memory lapses and cognitive decline, which are typically brushed off as normal aging. The intestinal barrier is crucial for immune function and can directly impact the brain through the blood or vagus nerve. Chronic inflammation from leaky gut can allow bacterial toxins to enter the bloodstream, potentially leading to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's. Vojdani notes that emotional stress, antibiotics, and chemicals can exacerbate leaky gut, while dietary changes, particularly the removal of gluten and dairy, can significantly improve symptoms. He shares his personal experience with food sensitivities, revealing how eliminating dairy and gluten transformed his health during medical school. Vojdani stresses the importance of understanding the emotional and psychological aspects of health, as stress can severely impact immune function. He cites studies linking emotional events to autoimmune flare-ups, underscoring the need for a holistic approach to treatment. Vojdani advocates for a comprehensive healing protocol that includes dietary changes, supplements like probiotics and immunoglobulins, and lifestyle adjustments. He encourages individuals to assess their immune health through symptoms and consider elimination diets to identify triggers. Ultimately, he emphasizes that healing is a personal journey, and while leaky gut is common, each individual's experience and path to recovery will differ.

The Diary of a CEO

No.1 Herbal Medicine Expert: This Over The Counter Drug Is Quietly Killing You!
Guests: Simon Mills
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Simon Mills, a pioneering herbal practitioner with more than fifty years in natural medicine, argues that conventional medicines have saved lives but carry long‑term risks and that we overuse antibiotics, fueling resistance. He emphasizes that many people could benefit from plant‑based medicines that act quickly and diversely, sometimes alongside standard care. Mills frames his mission as helping people become stronger by using plants within a scientific framework that complements conventional healthcare. He notes that traditional plant knowledge was displaced by modern pharmaceuticals as urban living reduced practical knowledge of herbs, and he describes how different cultures still rely on plants as medicine, including in Europe, China, and parts of Asia. Mills stresses that the body’s biology is accessible through the gut. He explains that digestion, the microbiome, and the liver connect to virtually all health outcomes, including brain health, immune function, and inflammation. He cautions that inflammation is a natural defense, not the enemy, and that chronic inflammation often has upstream causes in the gut and microbiome. Antibiotics not only wipe out pathogens but also disrupt gut diversity, contributing to resistance and longer healing times. He cites WHO figures and recent prescribing stats to underscore urgency. In practice, Mills sees thousands of patients with chronic conditions, including cancer, autoimmune disease, gut disorders, and hormonal problems. His approach is to fine-tune health by addressing root function—digestion, liver and kidney function, and circulation—rather than merely treating symptoms. He shares case examples: Heather, a 65-year-old with a severe skin condition linked to infections and gut-lung interplay, who improved rapidly after gut and lung support; and Karen, 37, with panic and anxiety whose liver function and sugar cravings were targeted, yielding cycle stabilization and mood benefits. Both illustrate that plant remedies often work through the gut-liver-brain axis. Mills demonstrates practical remedies: ginger and cinnamon teas warm and clear airway congestion; cayenne plasters and mustard baths can relieve joint pain by increasing local blood flow; garlic as a prebiotic with potent antiseptic properties; echinacea for upper respiratory infections; resins like frankincense and myrrh for mucous membranes. He discusses turmeric’s curcumin, its microbiome-mediated effects, and its potential in arthritis and brain health; green tea and rosemary as neurovascular protectors; cacao and dark chocolate as brain and heart supporters. He promotes dietary richness—eating the rainbow, prioritizing color-rich polyphenols, root vegetables, greens, and diverse plant foods—to nourish the microbiome and health. He cautions about long-term uses of acid-suppressants like omeprazole, proposing the raft method with slippery elm or seaweed-based products to protect the gut while wean off acid suppression. He also notes that lifestyle changes and intermittent fasting have context-dependent value. The discussion closes with practical advice on cost-effective, plant-forward eating, and the need for more reliable, evidence-based herbal resources. He also touches on the tastiness and versatility of foods and spices, including ginger, cinnamon, garlic, echinacea, rosemary, green tea, cacao, and matcha, highlighting how these can support heart, brain, gut, and immune health through polyphenols, prebiotics, and microbiome interactions. He emphasizes that there is no one-size-fits-all diet and that plants function as medicines best when personalized to the individual.
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