Stress Ushers in Harm Through MicrobiomeStress Ushers in Harm Through Microbiome
Gut Health

Stress Ushers in Harm Through Microbiome

Stress appears to do damage to our bodies in part by influencing our gut microbiome.
The gut-brain connection. Inkoly/Shutterstock
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This is part 9 in Cultivating Our Gut Microbiome to Stifle Disease

We might be on the verge of a new medical paradigm if what scientists are discovering about the microbiome ever makes it into the doctor’s office.

In this series, “Cultivating Our Gut Microbiome to Stifle Disease,” we’ll share how the latest developments on this medical frontier are transforming our approaches to illness and offering new strategies to heal and prevent disease.

A widely cited statistic that appears in several studies says that stress-related complaints are linked to 75 percent to 90 percent of doctor visits. Stress suppresses the immune system, causes the largest volume of lost work days, triggers episodes in diseases from asthma to gastrointestinal disorders, and is a major factor in top-killing diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease.
Stress appears to do this damage in part by influencing our gut microbiome. This symbiotic community of microbes that live inside us is made of trillions of bacteria, viruses, and fungi—and it’s very vulnerable to changes in its environment, the human body.