Science Vs - Fiber: The Secret to a Healthier, Happier You?
Episode Date: October 31, 2024We hear about fiber as the main ingredient for a good poo. But we’re starting to hear that it’s much more than that! Fiber is being hailed as a powerhouse nutrient, from powering up your gut and b...oosting your mental health to even helping with weight loss. So, does fiber really live up to the hype? We dive into the science with microbiologist Dr. Deirdre Mikkelsen, neuroscientist Prof. John Cryan, and nutrition scientist Dr. Andrea Glenn. Find our transcript here: https://bit.ly/ScienceVsFiber In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Fiber is so hot right now (02:16) How fiber helps you poo (04:55) Fiber supercharges the gut (14:02) Can fiber help your mental health? (18:36) A goop for a healthy heart (24:52) Fiber and weight loss This episode was produced by Michelle Dang, with help from Wendy Zukerman, Meryl Horn, Rose Rimler, and Ekedi Fauster-Keeys. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell. Fact checking by Erica Akiko Howard. Mix and sound design by Sam Bair. Music written by Bobby Lord, Emma Munger, Peter Leonard and Bumi Hidaka. Recording help from Nick Kilvert. Extra thanks to Kafayat Yusuf. And thanks to Joseph Lavelle Wilson and the Zukerman family. Science Vs is a Spotify Studios Original. Listen for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Follow us and tap the bell for episode notifications. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Hi, I'm Wendy Zuckerman, and you're listening to Science Verses.
Today, we're pitting facts against fibre.
That's right, the world's least sexy nutrient has been getting a glow up recently.
You might think of fibre as something your grandpa kept going on about, but all over
TikTok and socials, the sexiest people online are obsessed with it.
Fiber, that's the answer.
Fuel your body with fiber.
I need to eat more fiber and so do you.
It'll change the way that you think of food forever.
People say that this one little nutrient packs a huge punch. It'll supercharge your gut.
Say goodbye to gut inflammation
and hello to the best poos in town.
Start eating food that is rich in fiber.
Hey, we're dropping logs daily.
People are saying it can help you lose a ton of weight.
Fiber is literally gonna shrink your waistline.
I've lost weight, my belly fat's gone, my mad boobs are gone.
Apparently with enough fiber,
your depression could be gone too.
So you're not eating enough fiber,
your anxiety is gonna skyrocket.
I was suffering with depression for over a year,
and it was because I had neglected fiber.
We're hearing that fiber can even prevent other scary things,
like heart disease and cancer.
hearing that fibre can even prevent other scary things, like heart disease and cancer.
Yet apparently, a ton of us just aren't getting enough of it.
According to national surveys,
over 90% of folks in the US
aren't eating enough fibre every day.
90%!
So could adding a few scoops of bran to your diet
really be the thing to make you a better and brighter you.
When it comes to fiber, a lot of us want to be...
Dropping logs daily.
But then there's science.
Science vs. fiber is coming up just after the break.
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Welcome back.
Today on the show, we are diving into the world of fiber.
And to help us out, we have producer Michelle Dang.
Hi, Wendy.
How cool do you think fiber is?
I don't know. I'm very impressed by fiber.
Impressed by fiber?
Fiber can affect so many different parts of your body
that I didn't realize before.
Okay, all right, well where do we begin?
Okay, Wendy, so the one thing that everybody knows
about fiber is?
It keeps you regular.
Yes.
Which is such a funny euphemism for it makes you do good poos.
Yes.
Regular good poos.
Now I don't want to stay in poo land for too long, surprisingly for me, but why exactly
does Fyber do this?
So I talked to Dr. Deirdre Mickelson at the University of Queensland and she told me what
the ideal Fyberry poo looks like.
The sausage. That's a sausage sausage. That's a sausage.
Indeed. That's a sausage.
So you want sausages coming out of your end.
Smooth and soft.
That's right. Smooth and soft.
Because, you know, it's just coming out.
You're not having to force it.
So why does a good sausagey poo have a bunch of fiber in it?
Okay, so fibers are generally these carbs we can't digest.
They basically don't get destroyed by the juices that our gut throws at them.
And well, particularly think about the tough part of fruits and veggies, like the skin
or even nuts.
The fiber in these make it all the way down to your poo pipe.
Your lower intestine.
Yes. And they end up adding weight and size to your poo.
Oh, because if you eat something, I don't know, low in fiber, like white bread or something,
a lot of that is just going to get absorbed by your small intestine or whatever.
It's not going to get all the way down to your poo pipe, as you say.
Yeah, and here's the other part of it.
If you zoom in on a piece of fiber, it kind of looks like a tangled ball of yarn.
And in between the strands of it, that piece of fiber can entrap water.
This helps you get a nice, moist poo
that moves along as well.
Oh, that's cool.
No dry poos.
There's actually a study from the 80s
where they tracked how long it took 12 people to poo
after eating.
And on average, fiber made their poos faster by 24 hours.
Wait, so just by eating fiber, stuff moved through their gut faster by 24 hours. Wait, so just by eating fiber, stuff moved through their gut faster by 24 hours?
So, you know, it shaved off a whole day.
That's impressive. That's impressive.
Okay, away from poo now.
Can we dive into these bigger claims about the gut?
Like, I've heard that eating fiber can reduce the chance of
you getting leaky gut, irritable bowel syndrome, colon cancer.
Yes. To get us into all of those, you and me, we're going to start off by looking at
this amazing study that Deirdre did involving pigs.
Oh, okay.
Wendy, I don't think we do enough pig studies on this show.
Okay, okay. Well, let's bring in the pigs.
So, several years ago, Deardrea and her team got 40 pigs,
and these were chunky white pigs.
So, do imagine babe or Wilbur.
And they used these pigs,
because our guts are actually pretty similar to piggy guts.
So what happened to these little, little Wilbers?
All these pigs got a fancy meal.
We fed pigs steak, and this was good steak.
This is not some crummy thing.
It was barbecue, you know, steak.
So everyone got the steak as part of their diet,
but half of them had a bunch more wheat fiber added to their diets too.
Okay.
And they had to eat like this for a month before it was time to check on their guts.
And well, to do that, these pigs were then sacrificed.
The next step was for Deirdre to take a close look at what's going on in their intestines.
And well, these things are really long.
So if you think about your garden hose,
your green garden hose and how long
that green garden hose was,
that is basically what I unraveled.
Next, she gently squeezed the semi-digested food
out of the intestines.
And that made me go off pork for about three months.
I could not eat Japanese curry or any form of curry that'll look yellowish or whatever.
Sorry, I know it's a bit gross.
Yeah, it is a bit gross.
Here's where Deirdre is ready to do the fun part of the experiment.
She took this digested yellowy-brown stuff and stuck it under a microscope.
So big reveal, Deirdre's a microbiologist.
So she wants to look at what the gut bugs were up to
in these pigs.
So what was going on with the gut bugs?
What did the fiber do to the gut bugs?
Ooh, do you want to see pictures from her study?
Yes, oh my gosh, yes, yes, yes.
So this is what she saw under the microscope.
They looked at bits of meat inside the pig guts
and bits of fiber.
Okay, what am I looking at?
Do you see these little green dots?
Yes, yes.
Those are bacteria.
Oh, okay.
And do you see any green dots on this piece of meat?
No, they do not care about that little remnant of steak at all.
Yeah.
Here's D.R.G.
Interestingly, the microbes did not attach to the meat,
but they were very much attached to the fiber.
You could definitely see the microbes actually sticking to the fiber.
They're having a feast, basically.
Absolutely, they're having a feast.
Let me show you the piece of fiber.
Oh, whoa!
Oh my gosh, they love that fiber!
There's so many of them on there, right?
So many of them on there.
It's like a huge party.
I was trying to think, it looks like cicadas
stuck in a tree.
Like, there's so many of them,
and they're all up into all the crevices.
What does this mean for our health that these gut bugs love fiber
and do not like little bits of steak?
Yeah, fiber is the main food for these gut bugs.
I mean, they'll eat meat if they have to, but it's not what they want.
We know that they get more energy from fiber over meat.
And the fact that you're feeding gut bugs with fiber matters a lot because when Deirdre
looked at the pigs who got more fiber compared to the ones who didn't, they not only had
more good gut bugs, they had this amazing variety of them too, which is super important.
What is time and time again coming through
in all the studies that are being done
is that a healthy gut microbiome or a healthy gut microbiota
is one that is stable, one that is diverse,
and one that has got abundance.
This is something that I've heard from researchers
is if you think about your gut like a rainforest
and a healthy rainforest has lots of different animals, monkeys, cool insects, and that's a
healthy rainforest, but an unhealthy rainforest is a monoculture. And that's true with your gut as well.
Yeah, and in studies in people, we also know that both eating more fiber and having a more diverse
gut bug ecosystem is linked to a lower risk of chronic diseases like irritable
bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease.
Oh, that's cool.
And so what exactly are these gut bugs doing that's sort of making a gut healthy?
Yeah.
So there are specific kinds of bacteria that eat fiber and leave behind this chemical
called short-chain fatty acids.
Oh, so the gut bugs are kind of excreting these chemicals.
Yeah, and interestingly, the cells in your large intestine slurp up these acids as energy.
Really?
Like this stuff that gut bugs are farting out?
Owl, gut cells actually use that for nutrients?
Yes, it's very cool.
And now let me tell you what happens
if you don't feed your gut bugs.
It's not good.
And that's where I think people don't realize
that they're starving their microbes.
They're starving a portion,
a very important part of themselves.
Yeah, one thing microbes start to do is eat each other.
Doggy dog world, if you like.
But that's not all.
These hungry gut bugs can go after you, too.
They also start eating the mucin that lines the gut.
Oh. Mucin that lines the gut.
Mucin is kind of like this beautiful snot that lines your gut and
It acts as a wall of defense between all the harmful stuff that's in your intestines
Like viruses bad bacteria and toxins and the rest of your body
But if that mucin wall defense breaks down, those gut cells under the mucin might get damaged creating little holes in your gut lining that can then let toxins into your
blood and cause inflammation.
On a very basic level, if you don't eat enough fiber, your gut bugs get hungry,
your once friendly gut bugs get hungry
and they can then start eating this thing
that protects your gut lining
and so your gut lining starts breaking down.
Yeah, you might've heard it's called leaky gut
and we've seen this happen in mice that don't get any fiber.
And so studies have found that people
who don't eat enough fiber have holes in their
gut?
Yeah.
We think that's part of the reason why low fiber is linked to some of those bad gut diseases
I mentioned, like inflammatory bowel disease.
Okay.
And then what about cancer?
Well, not eating enough fiber can increase the risk of colorectal cancer.
In fact, Deirdre's colleagues saw the beginning signs of this in some of the pigs.
Within a month, without fiber, and if you had that high protein diet,
you were on track to develop colorectal cancer.
And that was frightening.
What did they say?
That the pigs who got less fiber
actually had worse DNA damage in their gut cells.
And why is that?
Well, one reason is because fiber helps
keep your gut cells happy, right?
Right, right.
And happy and healthy.
Yes.
But also if you have a diet that's high in red meat,
we know that can produce carcinogens
in your gut.
And if you're not eating fiber and not pooing regularly, that means those toxins stay in
the gut for longer, giving them more time to damage the DNA in gut cells.
Oh.
Yeah.
Here's Deirdre on that.
You can just see the effect starkly within a month.
That was what was so shocking.
In one review, people who ate the most fiber compared to people who ate the least fiber
had a lower risk of colorectal cancer by something like a third.
All right, Michelle, I am convinced that fiber is very important for my gut, reduces my risk
of colon cancer and all those yucky gut diseases.
That is all amazing.
And it helps you poo.
And it helps me poo.
Something I love as well.
Alright, next up, can we look at these claims around fiber and depression, that eating fiber can
help with your mental health?
Okay, so we do know the brain and the gut talk to each other in different ways.
Like there's a big nerve that connects the gut and the brain, and we're getting more
and more evidence suggesting that our gut microbes could be pumping out stuff like neurotransmitters that can chat with our brain.
Here's John Cryan, a neuroscientist from University College Cork in Ireland.
So our gut talks to our brain, but our brain talks to our gut.
Two-way street.
And when it comes to why fiber in particular might help your brain, do you remember how
when you eat fiber, certain gut bugs will eat that up and make those short-chain fatty
acids?
Yes.
Well, we think that those can travel through our blood to the brain and possibly help how
neurons communicate with each other.
Oh. So recently, John took fresh brain slices from mice
and doused them with those chemicals that microbes make.
And what he saw was that these chemicals
could affect synaptic plasticity,
which is how neurons can change their connections
between each other.
That's what helps us make memories and learn stuff. And John says it also might be helpful in treating depression. So here's how John thinks about fiber.
I think it is the fuel for your microbe factory. It is fuel and it's fuel for your brain.
So have there been any studies in people to really test this out, this idea that fiber can reduce depression?
Okay, so there are studies that have asked thousands of people about how much fiber they eat
and separately what their mental health is like.
And they generally do find a link between low fiber and depression and anxiety.
That's interesting.
Studies like this led to a lot of exciting headlines.
I'm sure.
Quote, the key to reducing your depression risk
could be fiber, study says, end quote.
I guess with those studies though,
it is impossible to know if it was the fiber
that caused the boost in mental health, right?
Because fiber, eating a lot of fiber
generally comes with a generally more
healthy diet of eating fruits and vegetables.
And there's lots of reasons why if you already have depression, you might
not be eating a healthy diet.
Yes.
It's hard to know in those types of studies, if it's really fiber making a
difference here versus other stuff going on in their lives.
Exactly.
And so to get to causation, we need our favorite, randomized controlled trials, where researchers
randomly assign people to take a pill full with fiber and see if it improves their mental
health compared to a control that gets a placebo.
Great.
Okay. Okay. So what are these studies find?
In this big meta-analysis that John was a part of,
they looked at 10 of these studies
and only two found it worked.
The rest of the eight studies didn't.
Oh.
Yeah.
In the results of the meta-analysis,
they said, quote,
no difference was found between fiber supplementation
and placebo for depressive or anxiety outcomes.
Yeah.
Disappointing though.
It would have been nice if fiber was the key to your mental health.
I asked John about it.
The bottom line for depression is that right now, the evidence for fiber isn't there.
Yeah, absolutely.
Okay.
But that doesn't mean it won't work.
Wait.
Why is he saying that?
I mean, one reason is that these studies kind of reduce fiber down to a pill.
Whereas some researchers say that eating fiber from a bunch of different foods
is what will make gut bugs happier.
Oh, okay.
Maybe we need to be doing these studies where we're telling people to eat
a big fiber-filled
diet instead of just taking a small supplement.
After the break, weight loss.
Can fiber help you shed those pounds?
Plus how fiber might even save your life.
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Welcome back.
Today on the show, we are talking about the wonders of fiber.
You thought it was just your grandpa's cereal, but in fact, the fiber's getting a glow up.
We're giving it a glow up.
We're here with producer Michelle Dang.
And now, where to next?
We are going to the heart.
We think fiber might actually be a lifesaver here.
Interesting.
How does this work?
Yeah, so we've kind of been talking about fiber
as one thing.
It actually breaks down into a couple different types.
So there's soluble fiber and insoluble fiber.
And within the soluble type, you've got stuff that turns into kind of a gel.
Sticky. We call it sticky fiber sometimes, the viscous fiber.
This is Andrea Glenn. She's a nutrition scientist at New York University.
And I asked Andrea about where we find viscous fiber in the first place.
You think of like oatmeal, like if you're playing with cooked oatmeal,
it's going to stick to your hands and that's the viscous fiber.
Have you ever eaten okra before?
And it's kind of...
It's kind of jelly.
Slimy jelly.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so that's also viscous fiber.
So yeah, it's in a bunch of stuff like fruit, eggplant, mushrooms, beans, for example.
And when it continues to mix with water in your stomach,
the gel gets even thicker.
And so then how is that good for your heart?
Well, it starts here.
So a big reason that people develop heart disease
is because eating sugar and fun stuff like muffins, candy,
can give you high blood sugar spikes.
And if that happens over and over again, you can get insulin resistance, which can then
lead to diabetes or even heart disease.
And what's super cool is that sticky fiber can help stop those high sugar spikes.
How?
Because when you eat food, that becomes that thick gooey stuff.
What that does is it slows down digestion,
so it stays in your stomach longer.
Because it's physically sticky and heavy.
In one study, they fed people five grams of gorgon,
a viscous fiber, with a meal and found that it slowed down food
going from the stomach to the small intestine by nearly two hours.
But didn't it make us poo faster?
Now it's making us poo slower. Is this because it makes us poo faster once the food gets into the
larger intestine, but now
all this fun action is happening higher up in the gut?
Yeah, exactly.
It's specifically slowing down the emptying of your stomach
into your small intestine.
And this is important because your small intestine
is where sugars get sucked up into your blood.
Oh.
And not only does it slow down food,
this goopy sticky gel is also coating up all the
foods that you've eaten with it, creating this barrier around it and making it harder
for little digestive enzymes to reach the sugars you've eaten.
So it means less sugar gets into your blood?
Not that, but it does mean that sugar gets into your blood slower.
Oh, because it's protected by this goop.
Right.
It makes it harder for your gut to slurp out sugars from the food you've eaten and suck
it up into your blood.
So your blood sugar goes up slower and then it goes down slower as well.
So if we ate an apple with a gummy bear, what would happen then?
Yeah, it would be better than just the gummy bear on its own, but...
Does it cancel out, or the sugar?
No, definitely not.
Okay.
If only.
Oh, but it actually does help a little because it slows down the sugar spikes, right?
Yeah. And then I also want to tell you quickly about cholesterol because fiber helps with that too.
Huh. Right?
Okay, so it's a very weird journey.
So the sticky fiber comes along and traps these things called bile acids in our guts,
which are there to help us digest food.
Uh-huh.
But this means that your body needs to make more and more bile acids.
And what's important for our story here
is that bile acids are made up of cholesterol.
Oh.
Yeah, so because the sticky fiber is trapping your bile acids,
basically taking them out of commission, your
body has to make more and more and more bile acids, which means it's sucking up more and
more cholesterol from your blood.
And that is how eating fiber reduces cholesterol?
Yes.
It's very tricky, right?
It's like, what?
That is very surprising. So does eating this viscous sticky fiber
have a measurable effect on the risk of heart disease?
Yeah, so recently Andrea did a study
to find out what are the long-term effects here.
And she used data of more than 200,000 people
that had been tracked for about 30 years.
And what they found was that people who eat a fiber-packed diet had a 14% lower risk of
total cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease.
So that includes things like heart attacks and then stroke as well.
That might not all be because of the fiber though, right?
Because like we've mentioned, if you're eating a healthy diet, you might also be
doing things like more exercise or other stuff.
That's true.
That's true.
But Andrea thinks it's real.
Yeah.
And Andrea could see in the data that the more viscous fiber people ate, the better
it was.
Cool.
Actually, there's a bunch of studies that have found this over and over again.
There's even one meta-analysis that found that for every 10 grams of fiber people ate
a day, it brought down their general risk of dying by 10%.
So that's pretty surprising.
Fiber, huh?
Can help you live longer.
All right.
So if that wasn't a reason enough to eat fiber, the last thing we're going to look
at is this claim around weight loss.
So what do we know here?
Okay, so there's viscous fiber. It moves pretty slowly through your stomach and into your gut, which also means you might not get hungry as fast.
So if you eat like a bowl of oatmeal and you don't need to eat for five hours versus like white bread
Maybe you'll be hungry again in two hours, and then you'll have an extra snack
So it might help control your calories that way that makes sense
And there's also some evidence that fiber helps with weight loss because of those gut bugs
When they munch up the fiber they love so much
They actually help your body pump out hormones
that could help you feel fuller.
Oh, cool.
But let's look at what happens to people's weight
when they actually have more fiber.
One study actually had people take this super viscous fiber
for a year, and they lost some weight,
but it was less than three kilos,
about six pounds compared to a control. And
in fact, a big meta-analysis looking at more than 60 trials found that people on fiber compared to
control diets on average, they lost about 0.3 of a kilogram. So it's not a lot? No, not much at all. It's a little less than a pound. Oh, that's so low.
That's so low.
Oh, I guess that, that classic thing of just eating is complicated.
And even if that bowl of oatmeal made you feel more full, it doesn't mean 30
minutes later, you're not reaching for the chocolate.
Yeah.
I'm speaking for myself personally.
Okay.
So even though fiber not particularly good for weight loss, it is good for
so many other amazing things.
Your heart, your gut, and yet 90% of us aren't getting enough of this.
So what does it take to eat enough fiber?
Well, Wendy, I had you track your fiber.
Yes.
Let's look at how you hold up to what you're supposed to be eating.
I wondered when that was coming into it. Yes.
Let me tell you first, the recommended amounts to eat, it's about 25 grams for women and 30 grams for men.
Okay.
More or less, depending on your age.
If I look at your data...
Oh, I'm nervous.
There were two days out of 14 that you hit your recommended amount.
That's it!
But on those days, you did really good.
You got over 40 grams of fiber on the days that you fed it.
But then on the rest of the days, you were around like 15, 16 grams, which
actually is where most of us are eating on average.
All right.
This is an example of an average person who did not reach their fiber.
I guess I'll just go through the stuff that has fiber in it,
because I ate a lot of, I ate a bagel,
I ate an apple scroll.
Garbage calories, right?
I ate half a tomato, two apples, half a carrot,
some lettuce, some walnuts.
That didn't get me there.
And you know, I tracked too.
I did not do a very good job.
So I know the struggle,
especially when things aren't moving along.
I talked to Deirdre about this too.
It's when I bring out the psyllium husk.
Yeah.
Oh, goodness me.
But listen, do you really want to have psyllium husk
stirred into a glass of water?
It would taste disgusting.
Just eat your friend's vegetables.
Just eat a celery with a bit of peanut butter, girl.
You'd love that.
That's funny.
Cause like looking at that day where I ate a lot of fiber, it was because I ate
two cups of frozen peas.
This is my ticket, my personal ticket.
Cause I don't know, peanut butter just doesn't do it for me, but frozen peas,
two cups will get you almost 15 grams.
That's like a lot of the way there.
That's my ticket to fiber heaven.
That's a bowl full of peas.
But that's a lot of fiber.
Now that I think about it, the next day I actually didn't feel great.
I was pretty bloaty and my poos were not the sausages.
So I guess you can go overboard.
Yeah, that can happen if you eat too much fibre suddenly.
It can make you bloated and farty, so you might want to ramp up the peas more slowly.
But still, but still, I mean, for the most of the time I wasn't doing that.
Michelle, what was your ticket to fibre town?
I got 25 grams of fibre from just eating tortilla wraps.
No way!
So maybe that, maybe I'll just keep eating burritos all the time.
That's awesome!
Was it like high fiber wraps?
Yeah, they were.
But again, it's best to get your fiber from a variety of foods.
Other tickets to high fiber heaven could be stuff like raspberries, whole grain pasta, lentils, beans, chia seeds.
Anyhow, why not throw in some high fiber wraps too?
Yeah, right.
Okay.
Well, to high fiber wrap up this episode here, Michelle, here is what I have learned about
fiber.
It is amazing for your gut.
Guess I kind of knew that before, but now I know that if you don't have fibre,
your lovely gut bugs will turn on you and start eating you.
And that could be bad for your gut.
Yeah.
Fibre, also amazing for your heart, particularly that viscous, sticky fibre
that you get from oatmeal and eggplants and okra.
Yeah.
Not particularly great for weight loss and depression, who knows?
So Michelle, you've been just swimming in the world of fiber for ages.
How do you think this is going to change your life this episode?
How has Science Versus changed your life, Michelle?
It's making me be more conscious
about what foods I'm selecting.
And I'm really thinking, oh my gosh,
there's all these trillions of microbes in my gut
that I need to feed.
I'm like, whoa.
So yeah, I am going to change how I eat.
And to take it home, here's what Deirdre had to say.
Fiber is not a sexy sounding word by any stretch of the imagination.
But what is sexy?
Sexy is what clever marketing executives put out, right?
To promote foods for our big multinational food company.
So to hell with sexy, I'm sexy, god damn it.
So yeah, I'm going to look after myself.
And hence, it means looking after my microbes.
And guess what?
That's your fiber for you.
Happy gut bugs, happy you.
Happy you.
Indeed, Michelle.
And I think on that note, I think that's a wrap.
No, sorry, that should be your thing.
Ha ha ha.
No, but that's exactly, that is so well put.
All right, well, Deidre said it.
That's a wrap.
And Michelle, how many citations are in this week's episode? Exactly, that is so well put. All right, well, Deidre said it. That's a wrap.
And Michelle, how many citations are in this week's episode?
There are 104 citations in this episode.
104 citations.
And if people want to read more about fiber and see these citations, where should they
go?
Please check out our transcript, which you can find in our show notes.
Yes.
And if you want to see all of the different kinds of foods that you can
eat to hit your fiber target and reach high fiber heaven, just go on to our
Instagram, science underscore VS, and we've got some diagrams waiting for you.
You can also say hello on my TikTok, which is at Wendy Zuckerman.
And let me know what you thought of this episode.
Thanks so much, Michelle.
Thanks Wendy.
["Wendy's Zookerman Theme"]
This episode was produced by Michelle Dang
with help from me, Wendy Zookerman, Meryl Horn,
Rose Rimler and Aketti Foster-Keys.
We're edited by Blythe Terrell.
Fact checking by Erica Akiko Howard.
Mix and sound
design by Sam Bear, music written by Bobby Lord, Peter Leonard and Bumi Hidaka, recording
help from Nick Kilvitt, an extra thanks to Caféette Youssef, plus thank you to Joseph
LaVelle Wilson and the Zuckerman family.
Science Busters is a Spotify Studios original.
Listen to us for free on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts.
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But if you are listening on Spotify, follow us and tap the bell icon for more episode notifications.
So you know when new episodes come out, like this one.
I'm Wendy Zuckerman. Back to you next time.