Restoring Your Intestinal Flora: The Key to Digestive Wellness
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About this ebook
• Explores the major causes of weakened flora, especially the overuse of antibiotics and the overconsumption of refined, low-fiber foods in the modern diet
• Details how to restore your flora after taking antibiotics and how to strengthen your flora with prebiotics, probiotics, and simple changes in eating and drinking habits
Our intestinal flora perform a large number of duties--far more than just aiding digestion. Recent research has revealed that our intestinal flora help fight off infections by killing microbes and viruses, increase our resistance to allergens and inflammation, cleanse our internal systems by neutralizing toxins, and even support our moods and energy levels by interacting with hormones and neurotransmitters.
In this easy-to-follow guide, Christopher Vasey explains how to restore balance to your microbiome. He examines the many functions of intestinal flora and their role in a healthy immune system, including their anti-inflammatory effects and role in the creation of lymphocytes. He explores the major causes of weakened flora, especially the overuse of antibiotics and the overconsumption of refined, low-fiber foods, and he outlines the ailments and diseases that can result, such as bloating, food intolerance, mood swings, fungal infections, and greater susceptibility to colds and flu.
Offering step-by-step methods, Vasey explains how to restore the flora after taking medications such as antibiotics, how to support your flora with the ingestion of prebiotics: high-fiber foods that provide essential nutrients for good gut health, and how to strengthen your flora with probiotics: foods or supplements that facilitate the regeneration of healthy intestinal flora. The author explores simple changes you can make in your eating and drinking habits to support your microbiome as well as practices to keep the flora of the colon out of the intestinal environment where they can wreak havoc. He also details the steps of the healing process, including the cleansing reactions you may experience as your intestinal flora rebalances.
Providing everything you need to know for optimum digestive wellness, Vasey shows that repairing the balance of your intestinal flora is simple and accessible to anyone.
Christopher Vasey
Christopher Vasey, N.D., is a naturopath specializing in detoxification and rejuvenation. He is the author of The Acid-Alkaline Diet for Optimum Health, The Naturopathic Way, The Water Prescription, The Whey Prescription, and The Detox Mono Diet. He lives near Montreux, Switzerland.
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Restoring Your Intestinal Flora - Christopher Vasey
Introduction
I regularly have problems with my digestion and I suffer from bloating. I often have diarrhea, which alternates with spells of constipation. I was prescribed a treatment with antibiotics, and ever since then I have not been feeling well. I have fungal infections that cause me a lot of inconvenience. I am beginning to develop intolerance to certain foods. I tend to catch colds and flu easily. I often feel a lack of energy. I am always feeling tired and subject to mood swings. Sometimes I even have problems with depression . . .
Stop! All of these disorders, as varied as they are, can be traced back to a single origin: your intestinal flora.
Recent studies have shown that the intestinal flora performs a large number of functions—many more than previously thought. More than our digestion depends on this flora. The intestinal transit, the body’s ability to detoxify and fight off infections, our resistance to allergies and inflammation, and even our vitality and joy in life all require beneficial flora. Many diseases can get a foothold once the intestinal flora begins to deteriorate. The problem is that in the modern world the gut is confronted by many threats. These threats are not outside dangers we can’t control, but are linked to both our dietary habits (refined foods that are sterilized and low in fiber) and the ways in which we deal with health issues (overuse of antibiotics). These are factors against which we can take effective action, and this book will show you how.
The first part of the book explains what the populations of intestinal flora are and describes all the functions they perform, what things can weaken the flora, and what diseases can arise as a result of that weakening.
The second part of the book is more practical. You will learn how to support the intestinal flora with the ingestion of prebiotics (high-fiber foods that provide the essential nutrients required by the intestinal flora) and how to reinforce the intestinal flora by taking probiotics (foods or supplements that are high in the bacteria that facilitate regeneration of the gut flora).
The means of repairing the intestinal flora that I am presenting here are simple, effective, and easy for anyone to apply.
Self-Diagnosis: How Healthy Is My Gut?
Analysis of Results
How many yes answers did you have?
0–3: Your intestinal flora is doing well but it would be a good idea to get to know it better in order to keep it healthy.
4–7: Your intestinal flora is experiencing difficulties. This is the time to begin applying the advice provided in this book.
8 or more: It is urgent that you rebuild your intestinal flora and start working on it immediately.
1
Microorganisms and Intestinal Flora
Microorganisms are everywhere; there is not a single place that is spared their presence. In the human body a large number of microorganisms live on our skin and on the mucous membranes of our hollow organs, such as the stomach and intestines. These populations are normal and include all the bacterial flora of our body. They are assigned different names depending on where they are located, so we have buccal (oral cavity) flora, pulmonary flora, vaginal flora, and cutaneous (skin) flora. There are also the bacteria that we are going to focus on in this book: the flora in the intestines.
The word flora used in this context may come as a surprise to some readers, as it is generally used to designate the various flowers that grow in a specific region. However, the word is also used to designate all the bacteria inhabiting a given region of the body.
? Did You Know?
In everyday speech we use the term intestinal flora, but scientists use the word microbiota, which includes not only bacteria but also fungi, archaea, and viruses present in the digestive system.
THE FORMATIVE PROCESS OF THE INTESTINAL FLORA
The intestinal, or gut, flora of human beings plays a major role in the proper functioning of the body. It is an indispensable link in the various stages of the digestive process, as it synthetizes nutrients, neutralizes toxins, and so forth. It is such a fundamental element of our health that the body would be incapable of carrying on without it. However, at the time of birth the newborn human being does not have any. A fetus’s digestive tract is sterile, meaning it is entirely flora free. So how does the microbiome come into being? Microorganisms enter the emerging infant from the outside—from the birth canal, the breast, and human touch—to populate the newborn’s intestinal tract.
The first microorganisms enter the body through the air inhaled by the newborn through the nose into the respiratory system. When they enter the body they settle in the mucous membranes of the nose, travel from there into the throat, and then further into the body.
Another entranceway is the mouth. The newborn’s mouth makes contact with many things besides air that have microorganisms, such as its own fingers, bedding, and the skin of the mother. These microorganisms then migrate into the intestines.
The primary agency for entrance into the body is food, which is loaded with microorganisms. The first food of the newborn human being is mother’s milk. A nursing baby ingests not only the milk but the bacteria it contains as well. As mentioned earlier, once inside the body these microbes travel into the intestines. Among these is lactobacillus, the principal bacteria that will populate the intestine.
Like all living things, microorganisms can survive only in an environment that offers favorable conditions for their development. The temperature and amount of moisture must be suitable, and the environment must provide the sustenance they need in sufficient quantities.
Some microorganisms will die once they enter the digestive tract because the conditions are too adverse. Others will simply travel through and be expelled from the body in the stool, because the living conditions they require cannot be met in the digestive tract. But a percentage of the microorganisms that have entered will find their ideal living conditions with an abundant supply of food. They will take up permanent residence, and when they multiply, they will colonize the intestine and form that organ’s flora.
? Did You Know?
Mother’s milk is ideal for the development of a newborn’s intestinal flora. Between 1960 and 1970, when nursing fell out of fashion, many babies were fed infant formula. The resulting deficiencies of their intestinal flora were the cause of a variety of health problems. It was the realization of the true source of these disorders that prompted a return to breast milk