The Dr. Josh Axe Show - The Shocking Reason Your Anxiety, Brain Fog & Bloating May Start in Your Gut
Episode Date: June 15, 2026What if the anxiety, brain fog, cravings, and inflammation you’re trying to fix didn’t start in your brain, hormones, or immune system — but in the trillions of bacteria living inside your gut? ...In this episode, Dr. Josh Axe reveals the hidden chain reaction that can begin with low fiber, antibiotics, stress, and ultra-processed food — and may end in leaky gut, poor nutrient absorption, mood issues, obesity, autoimmune disease, and chronic inflammation. Uncover what’s really going on in your body with advanced biomarker testing for hormones, thyroid, and metabolism— plus a 1-hour consultation with a Senior Health Advisor! → http://mybloodwork.com Download the FREE Gut Healing Guide: https://bit.ly/draxegutreset Thank you to our sponsors! Sunlighten Sauna: https://get.sunlighten.com/axepodcast Manukora Manuka Honey: https://manukora.com/axe Caraway Home: carawayhome.com/drjoshaxe (Use code DRJOSHAXE) for an exclusive discount Watch The Dr. Josh Axe Show every Monday & Thursday on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@drjoshaxe?sub_confirmation=1 🎧 Early Access! Our listeners enjoy every episode before anyone else! Tune in below and join our exclusive group of listeners → Spotify: https://bit.ly/DrJoshAxeSpotify Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/3JDvWcS Pre-order my NEW BOOK, Heal Your Cells → https://bit.ly/3QJBcQ5 Watch my free training on how to naturally balance your blood sugar and reverse your symptoms → http://DrAxeDiabetesClass.com Discover practical steps you can take today to start healing your thyroid naturally → http://DrAxeThyroidClass.com If you’re ready to start feeling like yourself again and balance your hormones, take my free class → http://DrAxeHormoneClass.com CONNECT WITH DR. JOSH AXE Instagram → https://www.instagram.com/drjoshaxe/ Facebook → https://www.facebook.com/DrJoshAxe/ TikTok → https://www.tiktok.com/@thedrjoshaxeshow/ X → https://x.com/drjoshaxe/ LinkedIn → https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshaxe Website → http://thehealthinstitute.com Sign up for my newsletter → https://bit.ly/4oE9Jf3 Ask Dr. Axe → http://speakpipe.com/drjoshaxe 00:00 – The Trillion-Microbe Paradox: You Are Outnumbered Inside Your Own Body 00:55 – The Root Cause of Anxiety, Brain Fog, & Bloating 06:35 – The Hidden Organ: What Your Gut Microbiome Actually Does 12:40 – The Fermentation Cascade: How Your Body Creates Short-Chain Fatty Acids 18:24 – The Gut-Brain Axis: How Bacteria Control Your Vagus Nerve 21:37 – Reversing Dysbiosis: Healthy vs. Disbiotic Gut Profiles 25:58 – The 6 Diversity Killers & The 4-Day Antibiotic Trap 31:25 – The Glyphosate Threat: How Non-Organic Foods Kill Good Bacteria 33:15 – Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT): The Cutting-Edge Ecosystem Reset 36:00 – The 30-Plant Protocol & Master Supplement Blueprint 41:23 – The Timeline: How Fast Can Your Gut Microbiome Completely Change? 44:37 – Rapid Fire Q&A: Leaky Gut, Artificial Sweeteners, & Histamine Reactions 49:16 – The 4 Critical Takeaways & Free Gut Reset Protocol DISCLAIMER This content is strictly the opinion of Dr. Josh Axe and is for informational and educational purposes only. It is not intended to provide medical advice or to take the place of medical advice or treatment from a personal physician. All viewers of this content are advised to consult their doctors or qualified health professionals regarding specific health questions. Neither Dr. Axe nor the publisher of this content takes responsibility for possible health consequences of any person or persons reading or following the information in this educational content. All viewers of this content, especially those taking prescription or over-the-counter medications, should consult their physicians before beginning any nutrition, supplement or lifestyle program. MB01GKPRPTQL1WL Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Spotify, it's Jay Shetty.
Are you one of those media strategy people?
Scrolling through spreadsheets, searching for an audience that pays twice as much attention to your ads than they do on social?
Let me introduce you to fans.
And they're here with me on Spotify.
Trust me, I know fans.
They don't skip.
They stay for hours.
They don't move on.
They manifest.
They're not a demographic group.
They're fans.
Spotify advertising.
You're among fans.
Right now as you're listening to me, you're outnumbered inside your own body.
You're carrying 38 trillion bacteria.
That's more than the number of stars in our galaxy.
And in the next few minutes, I'm going to show you the actual science on how those microbes
secretly control your mood, your immune system, and how long you actually live,
and exactly what to eat to improve it.
Because here's something that surprised even me.
90% of your serotonin isn't made in your brain.
It's made in your gut microbiome.
And stick with me, and I'm going to show you how to completely transform your gut microbiome today.
What if the anxiety you can't shake?
The afternoon brain fog or the bloating you've learned to live with didn't start in your brain at all.
What if it started in your gut?
Today I'm going to walk you through the science connecting your gut to your brain,
and your mood and your immune system, and I'll give you a simple five-step reset to improve the
health of your gut microbiome. And I'll dive into one study that completely changed the way that I
think about medicine. I can tell you after taking care of tens of thousands of patients and my local
brick and mortar clinic and online, that the single most overlooked organ when it comes to our health is
our gut microbiome. As I shared, your gut microbiome is home to 38 trillion bacteria that quietly
run your digestion, your mood, your immune system, and even how long you live. And right now,
as I mentioned, you are outnumbered inside your own body with 38 trillion bacteria. That's more than
the stars in the galaxy. And they're not along for the ride. They're actually running the show.
Listen, your gut microbiome in these bacteria in your gut, they're responsible for nutrient absorption.
So think about this. Let me ask you a question. How many vitamins and supplements are you taking right now and how well are you eating? Well, if your gut microbiome is not healthy, you might be absorbing less than 10% of the vitamins and supplements you're taking. You're only absorbing 10% of the vitamin C and iron and vitamin D because your gut microbiome is in balance. And so one of the greatest things you could ever do is fix your gut. I remember years ago I had a patient come in and I've had this happen many times. And she was taking something like,
80 pills a day of supplements. She was dealing with major fatigue, brain fog. She was overweight.
She was just holding a lot of water. And she was getting vitamin B12 shots every single week.
And still, her B vitamin levels weren't normal on blood work. And so I said, hey, we're going to
follow a completely different approach. We are going to go to the root of your issues and start
focusing on your gut. Now, you've heard this quote before, but it's important. Hippocrity said over
2,000 years ago, all. Not 90%, not 50%, all diseases. All disease.
disease begins in the gut. And so what I started doing with this patient is I said, listen,
we're going to put you on high dose probiotics. We're going to start consuming polyphenols and follow a
diet that's really going to change your gut microbiome. And after three months, she was able to get
completely off all of her medications. She was able to get off her vitamin B12 shots and her B
levels were finally normal. You know, there's a study out of Stanford. And it found that if you start
supplementing with certain types of probiotics and following a specific type of diet, it can double
your rate of absorption of B vitamins and nutrients that get into your bloodstream and into
yourselves. But if your gut microbiome isn't healthy, it doesn't matter how many supplements you take
or what you do, your body cannot heal properly. And this goes back to one of the most amazing phenomenon
in all of medicine is half of your body isn't human. Today, I'm going to walk you through how to fix
that half. I'm going to bring you through a doctor's guide to the gut microbiome in the real science,
the exact plan and protocol to completely transform your gut microbiome.
Now, a few other things I want to dive deep into today is how your gut microbiome controls your
hormones. I mentioned earlier 90% of your ceremony. That's your good mood hormone. If you want to be
happy and joyful and even sleep well, you need serotonin. 90% is created in your gut. But you also know
that around 20 to 30% of your thyroid hormone conversion happens in your gut microbiome.
Part of your estrogen conversion of your body creating the right amount of estrogen and testosterone,
some of that happens in your gut microbiome.
Now, here's a problem.
Listen to this.
One of the biggest reasons why we have such an imbalance in our gut microbiome today is the overuse of antibiotics.
This is going to shock some of you.
There was a medical study that found that if you take an antibiotic drug for four days,
they went and retested the gut microbiome six months later,
and there were many species and strains of probiotics in your gut that still hadn't returned.
So sometimes when you take antibiotics,
you permanently kill certain types of bacteria and yeast that you need to be healthy,
and many of them never return.
The other stat we know is 70 to 80% of your immune system is found in your gut microbiome.
So if you have a weak immune system,
the first thing you have to fix is your gut.
So here's what I'm going to dive into today and what you don't want to miss.
Number one, what your gut microbiome actually is and how it functions and why it's so important.
Number two, fiber. And not just any fiber, you might think, oh, maybe I should take Sillium Husker,
maybe I need to eat more apples or oatmeal. No, there are specific types of fiber that work better
than others for helping grow and cultivate the health of your gut microbiome. And if you consume the
wrong one, it'll actually cause health problems. Also, this is important. If you have histamine reactions,
if you have loose stool, if you have constipation, you actually want to change the type of fiber
consuming and I'll get into that. Number three, the gut brain access, why your gut is your second
brain and the connection between your gut to your brain, to your skin, into your immune system.
Number four, when it goes wrong. I'm going to walk through the single biggest factors causing
disruption in your gut microbiome. And some of them are absolutely going to surprise you. Common medications,
common daily lifestyle practices. Number five, I'll go through how to experience a breakthrough.
How do you create the optimal, healthy gut microbiome? And the last thing I'll touch on is the foods
and steps to rebuild your gut microbiome fast. So here's what your gut microbiome is. It is the
community of bacteria, fungi, and viruses living in your gut, mostly in your colon. Together,
they act as a hidden organ. They act as an organ in your body, just like your liver or your gallbladder.
They're responsible for digestion. They break down fiber. You can't.
and make vitamins and minerals. Did you hear that? This is important. Your gut microbiome actually creates
vitamins and B vitamins and butyric acid and essential fatty acid for your cell membranes and your brain.
So your gut actually creates vitamins. Second, it defends your body. Your gut microbiome and those
microbes help fight off candida and parasites and heavy metals and other toxins. Even glyphosate chemicals
helps you detoxify. Third, they support communication and hormone balance. They talk to your brain
through your vagus nerve. So you have your primary brain, then you have a second brain in your gut,
and those two nervous systems and brains communicate. Number four, they protect. They guard the gut barrier,
keeping toxins out of your bloodstream in defending your body from leaky gut syndrome.
So let's talk about your gut by the number. So here's what we used to believe. We used to believe that
the number of gut bacteria was less than your cells. Then in the early 2000, studies came out that said,
no, we think the bacteria in your gut is 10 times more than the cells in your body. Well,
here's what we found in the latest scientific evidence where we actually now know for certain
how many microbes we have versus how many cells we have. It's around a one to one or about a 1.3 to 1.0
ratio. So it's very close to even. Isn't that amazing that the number of cells in your own body
is almost exactly equal to the amount of microbial cells, microbes, that live in your gut?
So when I said half of your cells, that's the reality. So think about this, if half of your body's
microbial, here's a question for you, how are you taking care of that half? Now, I want to walk
you through the most important or some of the most important players in your gut microbiome. The first
is a type of bacteria called acrimancia.
Now, this is the gatekeeper probiotic.
Okay, and this has had recent research on it,
acting as a natural GLP1 support,
so it's good for weight loss.
It's critical for metabolism.
One of the things that's really important for,
though, is supporting your intestinal barrier.
It's one of the number one bacteria
for protecting your gut against leaky gut syndrome.
It also feeds your gut lining
so the barrier stays sealed, right?
So remember this with leaky gut.
It's almost like you've got a kitchen strainer.
Certain things should pass through.
Certain things shouldn't.
Accremancy is that gatekeeper that keeps your gut sealed up, which is very important for
supporting your body against autoimmune disease and autoimmune reactions and generally
supporting immunity.
The second important bacteria that makes up your gut microbiome is bifidopacterium.
Now, this is known as the peacemaker.
This is incredibly important, especially at birth, a lot of the probiotics that are passed on
from a mother to a child are bifidobacterium. These bacteria calm inflammation, and they train your
immune system. So when we talk about 70% of your immune systems in your gut, bifidobacterium activate
T-killer cells and NK cells, and a lot of these cells that fight cancer and pathogens in the body.
And then we have lactobacillus. Now, this is sort of the classic probiotic. You're going to get in things
like yogurt and kiefer. These live in your gut, but they're very important for.
for your mood and that gut-brain connection.
And then we have a probiotic that's rarely been heard of.
It's called F-Prosnizity.
And this is the fuel maker.
It is the top butyrate producer in your colon.
Now, here's what butyrate is.
I'll get into it more in a minute.
Buterate or butyric acid is a type of fatty acid
that's created in your gut
that is very important for fueling your cells
and helping transform your cell membrane.
Remember your cell membrane allows nutrients to get in and helps toxins get out.
And when your body doesn't have enough buterate, it negatively impacts your brain,
your nervous system, your cell membranes, very, very important.
The next we have are soil-based organisms.
Now, these probiotics don't take residence as much in your gut as others.
They're called spore-forming bacteria, SBO, or soil-based organisms.
but these spore forming tend to transiently sort of go through.
They pass through and they leave and they pass through.
They're always coming and going in your body or they should be coming and going.
And soil-based bacteria are the most resistant to stomach acid.
They help rebuild the berry.
But here's what they do.
They act as a bulldozer.
If you have too much candida or parasites or pathogenic microbes in your body,
bacillus subtilus, bacillus coagulins, these bacillus espylus,
SBO probiotics, act like a bulldozer, and clear out the bad bacteria, viruses and parasites,
out of your body. And the last here key player are what I call the pathobiance. Okay. These are
the pathogenic bacteria. They're the troublemakers, okay? In small amounts, they're harmless.
But when your diversity drops of the most necessary bacteria, like bifidobacterium,
they start to sort of take over too much. So candida,
E. coli. H. pylori. Blastocystis hominus. These are, those primarily are the ones that start to grow out of control. Candida, maybe being the largest one in H. Pylori, that will wreak havoc on your body, causing you to not absorb nutrients as well, not be able to create nutrients as well, weaken your immunity and cause major health issues. And I want to walk you through kind of the pathway in the cascade of how your body creates more of these good or even bad bacteria in the body. So it really starts with this.
You eat fiber or resistant starch, okay, and polyphenols to a degree to.
So these are things you can't digest on your own.
And so the bacteria actually go and they ferment it in your colon.
They break it down, and that turns into different microorganisms.
Then what happens, during that fermentation process, they release what are called short chain fatty acids.
Now, many of you've heard of, like, medium chain fatty acids.
Those are found in coconut oil.
those are great for ketones and for supporting healthy energy levels.
Long chain fatty acids, of course, are good for hormones and a number of other things.
But these short chain fatty acids are critical for the creation of, as I mentioned,
buterate, acetate, and other types of fatty acids that your brain and body need.
And here's what these short chain fatty acids do.
They fuel your colon.
So remember, medium chain fatty acids are like fuel for your brain, okay?
Found in coconut oil, fuel for your brain.
Short chain fatty acids are fuel for your colon and for your cells, and they calm inflammation.
So they actually power your cells and seal your gut barriers.
Remember, short chain fatty acids, critical for cell membrane, reducing inflammation,
but also as fuel for your colon and intestines.
And this is pretty amazing.
70% of your colon cells energy, so the energy that your digestive system needs to function properly,
comes from buterate. And this is a fuel your own body actually just makes in really small amounts
and but your bacteria rely heavily on it. And again, here's why butyrate matters so much. It powers
and repairs gut barrier cells. It calms inflammation throughout your entire body. Oftentimes when
you're having joint pain, that's not coming from your joint. The majority of the time with
conditions like rheumatoid arthritis, it's coming from the gut itself. The other thing butyrate does
it helps regulate blood sugar and appetite.
So when you're craving food or you just feel, hey, smooth, healthy energy throughout the day,
buterate is responsible for that.
Also, buterate supports cellular function and even mitochondrial function.
And there are three primary short-chain fatty acids.
Number one is buterate, which makes up about 20% of those molecules that you're finding in that gut microbiome,
the short-chain fatty acids.
Then you have propionate, which goes to and actually impacts and communicates with the liver.
Buterate really stays more local and really is most important for that kind of gut microbiome.
Propronate, as I mentioned, is important for liver and blood sugar function.
And then there's one called acetate.
And that actually is the largest amount of short chain fatty acids that your gut creates.
And this travels through the blood and helps regulate appetite, but even your cholesterol level.
So it helps with balancing cholesterol.
And here's an important thing to know.
This is why fiber intake is so important.
if you don't eat fiber, your body does not produce most of these short chain fatty acids.
This is another reason why I don't love the carnivore diet long term.
I like it short term for people that have major illnesses, major inflammatory responses,
issues related to mold toxicity, histamine, where you kind of get down and do predominantly meat for a period of time.
But long term, if you're not getting plants in there in fiber, your body's got to have a very hard.
time producing short-chain fatty acids. And over time, I think this can cause health issues related
to gut health in the immune system and even brain health. And as I mentioned earlier, one of the
amazing things that some of these gut microbes do and these short-chain fatty acids are part of it,
is there is this communication happening between your gut and your brain. I have a colleague
that's a friend of my, Dr. David Perlmutter, and he wrote a book called Grain Brain. And I think this
year I had William Davis on who wrote a book called Wheat Belly, both of these medical doctors,
have written about in their books,
this connection between the gut and the brain.
And I've done a lot of research on this myself.
And the way this works is,
is we have these trillions of bacteria in our colon.
Those produce metabolites like short chain fatty acids
and GABA neurotransmitters and serotonin.
Those then communicate with our brain and our nerve system,
like the vagus nerve.
So this is also why when your gut is healthy,
you have a greater chance of being able to have more balanced horn
even lowering cortisol levels, having more of that calm, serenity, lower stress levels when you're
creating more of these short chain fatty acids, then your vagus nerve, of course, communicates
and connects to your brain. And that's going to impact your mood, your stress, your ability
to focus, even your appetite. So your gut has a really deep connection to your nervous
system and your hormones. And to give you a specific example of this of how your gut,
bacteria are so connected to your brain, there was a study done in mice where they went and they
cut part of that connection to the vagus nerve. And there was a specific probiotic called Lactobacillus
Ramnosis. And it measurably reduced anxiety and changed the brain's calming receptors.
Okay, so they saw it had that effect on the body. And that amazing. So think about this.
A lot of times when we think about depression or anxiety, the first supplements we run to might be
vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids.
Some people turn to a medication.
We think of St. John's Wirt, Sam E, Saffron, and those are amazing supplements.
However, studies are showing that changing your gut microbiome and using probiotics can also have a profoundly positive effect on your brain and nerve system.
But here's what they found in this study.
If we would cut the vagus nerve, those probiotics no longer had the same effect on the brain.
So really, there is a very specific pathway.
where the bacteria impacts the nerve, the vegas nerve, which then impacts the brain.
And the vegas nerve is sort of this connection between your second brain and your gut
and your primary brain.
And when that line, that vegas nerve is cut that connects the two, the bacteria no longer
have the same positive effect on your brain.
In fact, in this study done, when the vegas nerve was cut, the impact dropped to zero.
Now, a few more important things to know about your gut microbiome.
And this is critically important.
Number one, your gut is one of a kind.
Your microbial mix is nearly as individual as your fingerprints.
Even close family share only a fraction of the same species.
And this is why I believe so strongly in personalized medicine as well.
Every patient I care for, I lay out a very specific individualized plan.
In fact, I can say this with confidence.
I have not had a patient I've taken care of.
probably in the last five years that has had the exact same nutrition plan.
Every supplement recommendation.
Now, there might be some similarities.
I'll give an example.
If I have somebody come in with hypothyroidism, oftentimes I am recommending ashwaganda and
selenium and certain other nutrients.
However, with the advanced blood work I do, I can see and map out exactly what's going on
with them.
I also do tongue mapping.
I get all of this history.
And every person gets it dialed in specifically to them.
And the reason I do that is that's how you get the best results.
because all of you, every one of you, has a unique gut microbiome, you have unique epigenetic needs,
and you need something customized specifically for you. So my point there is is your gut is one of a kind.
Number two, your gut keeps a daily clock. Your microbes rise and fall on a daily and nightly rhythm.
And this is why sleep is so important because your body balances out some of these microbes while you sleep.
Number three, birth sets the first seed. Vaginal versus
C-section delivery starts babies off with strikingly different microbiomes.
And four, your bugs sway your cravings.
Gut microbes help shape appetite, influencing which foods you reach for next.
I'll give an example of this.
If you have a lot of the right type of bifidobacterium and lactobacillus and acrimandcy and
these gut microbes in your gut, you're not going to really crave sugar very often.
You're just not going to crave it.
If you have a lot of imbalanced bacteria in your body, these pathogenic bacteria, like the
candida, for instance, certain microbes in your gut crave different things.
Candida craves sugar.
It says, I want more and more and more.
And the more candidity you have, the worse your sugar cravings are going to be.
And so there's this sort of like vicious cycle that takes place.
Now, here is this cascade of what I call dysbiosis.
Disbiosis means biosis.
We're talking about sort of the bacteria in your microbiome.
And dis means it's in balance.
It's not right.
It's not correct.
So when we create this disc, this disruption in your microbiome, it starts with this.
Low fiber intake, taking drugs and medications like antibiotics and chronic stress.
Those three things are the single biggest things destroying your gut microbiome.
Low fiber and low nutrient intake, antibiotics, chronic stress.
And I would also throw as a fourth one on there, overconsumption of sugar.
Okay?
with that you have loss of microbial diversity.
Well, when you have less microbial diversity,
now your gut produces less short-chain fatty acids like butyrate.
Now your gut barrier weakens causing leaky gut.
Leaky gut then allows endotoxins and undigested food particles
and toxins into your bloodstream.
That creates chronic low-grade inflammation.
That inflammation that happens over and over and over again
leads to increased insulin, obesity, depression, irritable bowel disease, and over time,
autoimmune disease. This is the exact cascade that happens in almost every person with
autoimmune disease, IBD, depression, and obesity. So this is a predictable chain reaction.
Another thing that I'll do in my clinic is I will do what's called a GI map where we do a stool
sample for three days, send that into a lab, we get the results back, and I can see exactly what
microbes are in your gut. Okay. I can do that.
see the good bacteria, I can see the bad bacteria, I can see the yeast, the fungi, the
candida, the parasites, certain viruses, I see all of those mapped out there. And then I know
the exact right herb snake. So for instance, if it's a parasite, we want to do wormwood and black
walnut. If it's an issue such as candida, right, we might be a little bit more oregano and
burberine and focus more on caprylic acid and a very specific type of diet for that. Maybe you're
deficient in certain types of bacteria. So then I'll want to hone in on a very specific type of
probiotic. The problem is a lot of people today, you're guessing because you've never had the right
type of blood work or GI map. And so you don't even know where to start. Now, I'm going to walk
you through for most of you what's going to make the biggest difference in what will help everyone.
Still, oftentimes, there is value in getting a GI map done. So let me give you a comparison of a healthy
gut versus a dysbiotic gut microbiome. A healthy gut has high microbial diversity, right?
So it has a larger amount.
I remember doing this years ago.
I wrote a book called Eat Dirt.
And I studied all of these different cultures.
And we found the cultures with the greatest diversity
had the best dental health, the best heart health, the best metabolisms.
So you want large microbial diversity.
And I'll talk about how to create that in a minute.
You want a thick, protected mucosal layer of your gut.
You want abundant short chain fatty acids like buterate.
A healthy gut is also, it's calm, it has low inflammation.
It also has a tight and sealed gut.
barrier. A dysbiotic gut, low diversity, few dominant bugs, thin erodeumucosal layer,
increasing your risk of leaky gut, very low short chain fatty acid production. Those are some
of the problems we're going to see. And when that happens, when you have poor gut microbial
diversity, it is connected according to clinical studies. Number one, IBS and IBD. It could be
Crohn's, colitis, IBS, but also just generally digestive issues like gas and bloating.
food sensitivities are all connected there. So these digestive issues, we also see metabolic issues
with microbial diversity, obesity, type 2 diabetes, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. We see brain
and mood issues, depression, anxiety are high on the list, even dementia. We see weakened immunity.
We see rheumatoid arthritis, MS, allergies, and asthma. We see skin issues, eczema,
acne, rosacea, psoriasis. And then we see,
see cardiovascular issues, heart disease, and even colorectal cancer when you don't have enough
microbial diversity. And so the next question is, well, what is killing your good bacteria? Well,
let me walk you through the six biggest diversity killers of your gut microbiome. Number one is
ultra-processed food, right? Ultra-processed food is low in fiber. It's low in polyphenols. And it has
inflammatory compounds like sugar and certain types of inflammatory oils that are going to eat away at your gut lining and damage your bacteria.
So ultra-processed foods the number one killer today of good microbes in your gut.
Number two, broad-spectrum antibiotics. Carpet bombing your ecosystem of your gut is a terrible idea.
The number one most over-prescribed medication today, at least in kids, is likely antibiotic drugs.
Often today these kids have viruses. They're prescribed antibiotics, which never kill a virus.
You'll wipe out all the good bacteria for these kids. And now your kids are more susceptible
to immune issues and allergy issues and weakened immune responses and a number of health problems.
Even cancer and autoimmune disease are increased in the future.
Number three are certain medications. Did you know that contraceptive drugs, that's right,
birth control acts as a antibiotic as well in the body. So greatly harms the gut,
microbiome, PPI drugs, inseds, and metformin, all reshape the microbial community, all of those
damage to gut microbiome. Number four, glyphosate and pesticides. These herbicides not only kill
bugs on our plants, they kill the bugs in your gut. Number five is chronic stress. I can't over-exaggerate
how much stress damages our gut. It shifts your community and weakens the barrier in your gut. So stress,
it almost starts to feed the bad bacteria and starves the good bacteria when cortisol gets too high.
And the number six, I've mentioned this once before, two little fiber.
The average adult gets 15 grams of fiber a day when they should be getting 35 grams of fiber a day.
So we're getting less than half the amount of fiber we should be getting.
And remember, good microbes feed off of fiber.
there is a specific study done in regards to the use of antibiotics.
And they found that if you use an antibiotic for just four days, just four days, not even finishing a full round, nine species of bacteria were still gone six months later.
And these were important species.
Here's the reality.
Antibiotics can save lives in an emergency, but they are overprescribed approximately 90% of the time.
I had Dr. Marty Maykery, the former head of the FDA on my show.
And he shared with me that they are the most over-prescribed medication in children and that they
were doing more harm than good, generally speaking. Because here's what happens. Antibiotics don't just
clear the infection. It wipes out beneficial species of bacteria that live in your gut. Here's the other thing.
I think I've noticed this in more recent years. People are getting the common cold and flu.
And I think that they're having a harder time beating it. We saw this especially, of course,
with the COVID strain for other reasons.
But these bugs are becoming more resistant.
They're becoming more resistant to the antibiotics we're taking.
I think they're generally just becoming stronger and more resilient.
And so by the overuse of antibiotics,
we're also creating these super bugs that are harder for our bodies to be.
Now, I do want to mention I had to get on antibiotic.
I've only been on antibiotic one time since I was, I don't know, probably 18 years old.
It's been a long time.
And it was when I had my spinal infection nearly died about three years ago,
three and a half years ago. And I had to get on it because of this infection was eating away at my bone and
my disc and by my spinal cord. And I had to do it for one month. I did it as an IV, which is actually
less harmful on your gut on your gut, but more harmful on your cells in mitochondria.
All that being said, I was very conscious of what to do. And I spent hundreds of hours researching
how to help heal the microbiome, how to protect it. I called friends of mine Jordan Rubin and Dr.
Gezegoli and some of the best doctors around the country. And I put together a program for myself
to most protect and help my body heal after using antibiotics. And what the research shows is,
you want to do very, very high levels of probiotics. That's the single most important thing.
And you want to do diverse strains, you want to do soil-based organisms. But I would say around
500 billion to a trillion daily, very high-dose probiotics for three to nine months after you
take an antibiotic drug if you ever have to.
In addition, you want to do high fiber.
You want to do the right types of fiber, low sugar.
Also, you want to consume a lot of B vitamins because when you take antibiotics, it sort of
wipes out your body's ability to produce B vitamins.
And that can also weaken mitochondrial function.
You also want to consume a lot of foods that are rich in polyphenols, which I'll hit on
in just a minute.
But overall, if you ever take antibiotics, the diet is low sugar, it's high fiber fruit,
it's steam vegetables, it's organic meat, it's a lot of this good forms of fiber and it's very high-dose
probiotic. If you ever have to take an antibiotic, that's exactly what you want to do to help rebuild
your gut microbiome fast. Now, I want to mention another antibiotic. Now, we don't think about it like
this, but glyphosate is a antibiotic. It kills bugs and bacteria that may impact plants,
but anytime we're eating food that's non-organic, you're almost
always getting some level of glyphosate in the food you're eating. You know, glyphosate kills weeds
by blocking an enzyme called ESPS. And we've been told that it's safe because human cells don't have
this. That's true, but here's the thing. Your gut bacteria do. So it may not harm your cells,
but it does harm all of the bacteria in your gut, specifically bifidobacterium. Remember that key
probiotic I talked about that a mother passes onto her child?
that's the bacteria that is greatly harmed and injured with glyphosate. So if you're eating
non-organic food, a lot of the dirty dozen food and non-organic meat, you are getting glyphosate.
If you're spending a lot of time on golf courses, you're typically exposed to glyphosate.
This is a chemical that's sprayed on wheat, oats, corn, soy, and a majority of our plants today.
So we know Roundup and glyphosate harm bifidobacterium, but here's what they also found in the study.
54% of your gut microbiome, of your microbes, contain this ESPS. So generally speaking, Roundup and glyphosate are going to damage
54% of the microbes in your gut, especially bifidobacterium and lactobacillus. Those are the main
probiotics that you need for health and survival. So the key here when it comes to avoiding Roundup
in glyphosate is eat organic. This is my biggest argument I could make for.
or switching and eating organic as much as you possibly can with your food.
Now, I mentioned that in order to heal my own gut when I was diagnosed with a life-threatening
infection and got an antibiotic, the biggest thing I did was took probiotics, and I consumed more
fiber.
There's another type of advanced therapy I did, though, that is really, really cutting edge.
And it may sound a little bit strange, but here's what it is.
Doctors are curing infections in healing gut microbiomes with stool.
There is a type of therapy. It's called FMT fecal microbiota transplant.
Okay, this is moving a healthy person's gut bacteria into a sick one.
Okay. This is now standard of care for recurrent clostridium difficile infections.
This is an infection that antibiotics often can't be. So here's a site. So here's what they do.
They take the healthy microbes in the form of stool from one individual and do it to another.
Now, you could do this as a suppository, or now they have these time release capsules where you can actually do this as capsules.
And so here's how it works. You take a healthy donor and they're screening the stool.
They're looking for everything right. They're doing it essentially a GI map, an in-depth GI map to say, is this person's still healthy?
And they test a lot of people and only find a few. Well, will they find that? And then they transfer it via, as I mentioned, capsule or procedure into the colon.
And then there is an, basically what happens is an ecosystem reset. This donor microbes recons.
colonize and out-compete bad bacteria like C. difficile and candida and these other types of microbes.
And then over time, the patient recovers, this is where antibiotics fail. Listen to this study.
81% of patients that went through FMT therapy, 81% cured with bacteria. With the drug, only 31%.
So using someone else's gut microbiome, their stool, to reset yours, 81% effective,
31% and effective with the drug.
By the way, the 31% effective, that's in the short term.
We're not even talking about the antibiotic using that study is called vancomycin.
This is a very powerful drug that long term is going to cause other immune issues.
So, you know, you would have a choice, 81% effective by using FMT therapy versus 31% effective short term with major medical issues down the road.
By the way, in the study, this was published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
they actually stopped the trial early because they felt like it was no longer ethical to keep
patients on the worst treatment and they decided to transform all over to this new treatment
instead. That's how much more effective FMT therapy is. And by the way, this was something that
I did when I had to get on antibiotics for a month to totally heal and restore my body. And so if you're
a person and you know you have a radically unhealthy gut microbiome and you've ever had an issue
like C. difficile or major inflammation of your colon or other health issues, just major
imbalance. Here are the steps I would encourage you. Number one, get a GI map. By the way, this is
something that we can do at the longevity clinic. We can help you with or find a great doctor who
does this sort of advanced functional medicine testing with GI maps. And then also consider
FMT therapy because it's probably the most effective single thing you could do most advanced
therapy for resetting your entire gut microbiome. Now, if you're like me and you want to know
exactly what to do and what to aim for to have a healthy gut microbiome, I want to give you the
statistics and numbers you should be aiming for in terms of your plant variety and your daily fiber
intake. Okay. So by the way here, I want to mention this. You do not want to be normal. Normal is not
the goal. Normal is not good. Okay. The normal person on a weekly basis consumes about 10 different
types of plants, okay? 10. And so plants, of course, you know, this could be everything from oats to
rice to lettuce, to vegetables, to fruits, to beans, any type of those plants, okay? The average person gets
10 in their rotation on a weekly basis. You really want to be shooting for at 20 to 30. That's what you
should be shooting for is a much wider variety of plants on a regular basis. And so the way we do this and
And by the way, because the more plant variety you have, typically the more diverse your gut bacteria is because different types of polyphenols and antioxidants and different types of fiber and nutrients support the growth of different types of microorganisms and bacteria.
And so, for instance, for breakfast, you shouldn't do an apple every day.
It's you have an apple one day and then kiwi and then blueberries and then a bunch of different types of berries together and you sort of get more variety there.
One morning you have oatmeal. Another, you do have an apple. Another morning you add pumpkin or sweet
potato to a smoothie. If you're steaming or baking vegetables, one day you do broccoli and cauliflower,
another day carrots and asparagus, another day zucchini and squash. So you are getting more variety
in your diet, right? Eating the full color of the rainbow, that's good advice and that creates a better
and more healthy gut microbiome. And the daily fiber intake. The average person is getting around
14 to 15 grams of fiber a day. You want to be getting at least 30 for most people. So we want to go
from 15 up to 30. You want to at least double it. By the way, eating more of the fruits and vegetables
and beans and nuts and seeds and more of those plants we talked about, that's going to help get you
there. And let me go through some of the top gut healing foods and fiber-rich foods that you'd want
to be adding in that are very helpful for healing. Number one are onions, garlics, and leeks.
Okay, they contain a key compound called inulin. It is a fermentable fiber that is very good
for bifidobacterium and acrimancia. Now, I do want to mention, okay, if you have a histamine
reaction, so let's say you eat certain foods and you know you have histamine and mass cell
reaction, your skin gets red. You just, you have a reaction, okay? Then you may not want to
want to get all these foods. We want to do certain types of fiber that are not going to be as
fermentable. And I'll talk about those in a minute. Okay. Now, here's some other gut healing types of fiber.
So we talked to with the onion, garlic, and leak. In addition, you want to do cooked potatoes.
And then you can let them cool and then eat them later, even later on that day or the next day.
But the type of starch in sweet potatoes and white potatoes, purple sweet potatoes, any type of potato,
is fantastic. This type of resistant starch. This type of resistance starch,
is the number one starch that's going to support butyrate production.
By the way, I also believe that plantains have a similar type of starch in them as well.
In addition, I want to talk about a kind of category of, I could call it fiber in general here.
They're actually, I think, long chains of polysaccharides, but it's called beta glucon.
And these are found in large amounts in oats, barley, and mushrooms like Shataki and Mitaki.
These beta glucans also create butyrate.
They also activate and build your immune system, creating more natural killer cells,
T cells that fight cancer and infections.
So oats, barley, and mushrooms, specifically more of the medicinal mushrooms like Shataki and Mitaki.
Then we have the live cultures in kimchi and sauerkraut.
These create more of the lactobacillus species like lactobacillus plantarum.
Then we have kefir and yogurt, also good for lactobacillus and befifference.
photobacterium, and then things that have polyphenols, polyphenol-rich foods.
This is blueberries, all types of berries.
It's pomegranates.
It's going to be cacao.
It's green tea.
It's extra virgin olive oil.
These are some things categorically that you can add into your diet that are going to feed the good guys in your gut microbiome.
So again, here's the key, in a nutshell.
Eat more fiber-rich plants, up to 30 different a week.
Get more fermented foods daily like kefir, sourcrow, yogurts, eat more polyphenol-rich foods and antioxidants,
get more resistant starch, potatoes, especially sweet potatoes are a great option.
And then you also want to just reduce inflammation.
Get more omega-3s is great for the gut microbiome.
Fish oil, flax, walnuts are great options.
And then let's walk through the supplements that most change and create a healthy gut microbiome.
Number one are soil-based probiotics, SBOs.
bacillus subtilis, bacillus, bacillus, coagulins. These survive the stomach acid and have a big impact.
Remember, I said they act like a bulldozer clearing out the bad bacteria, which then make room for more good bacteria.
Now, I also want to talk about prebiotic fiber. If you have mass cell or histamine issues,
you want to use a type of fiber called pHGG and MCP. That's modified citrus pectin.
So Ph.GG is the best if you're having these histamine reactions, it creates the growth of good bacteria
without the over-fermentation. Now, if you just generally want what's best, you can get inulin, you can get acacia fiber.
Cillium hustos are all fine there as well as prebiotic fiber. And the number three, one of my favorite supplements,
this is actually a type of friendly yeast for if you have acne, rosacea, if you have bad material overgrowth, is sarcomesis-bulardi.
This is especially good for diarrhea. It's a very good for diarrhea. It's a very good.
also very good if you've used an antibiotic. So sarcomices-Belardye, a powerful type of probiotic that can
reset your gut microbiome. Number four supplement that's great for your gut microbiome is
l-glutamine powder, doing five grams once to twice daily. This is a fuel for your gut lining
in a different way than butyrate or butyric acid. So you can take l-glutamine powder.
Another big one is called zinc carnacine. Zinc is your gut repair mineral. It helps repair your gut
been damaged. Number six, omega-3 fish oils. Now, you can also take and get buterate as a supplement.
So you can take omega-3s and buterate in things that actually support the growth of good bacteria in
your gut and support that gut lining. But these would be my top supplements to consider taking
for resetting your gut microbiome. So in a nutshell, here's what you want to do. Get more plants
to support diversity, eat more fermented foods, feed those
bacteria in your gut with more types of fiber, right? You want to protect them with polyphenols and getting
better sleep and managing stress. And then you just want to reinforce the bacteria you already have by
adding more in by taking a quality probiotic supplement. Those are the things that are going to move
the needle the most at transforming your gut microbiome. And one question I get is, how fast can I see my gut
microbiome change? Well, the answer is really in about two to four days. I mean, your diet starts to
shift your microbes very, very quickly. In two to four weeks, according to clinical studies,
your short-chain fatty acids can start to climb, your digestion improve, energy and
regularity improve. And then in three to six months, you can literally have a completely new
gut microbiome. But the thing I would say is you just want to create a consistent plan of
the right diet, the right lifestyle, the right supplementation in order to retrain and change
your gut microbiome. Now, I've probably answered a lot of the questions you have. However, I do want to
answer some of the most common questions I get more of in a rapid fireway when it comes to
questions about the gut microbiome. Here's the first question. Do I really need a probiotic?
Here's what I would say food first. Fiber, fermented foods, polyphenols, those should be first.
But a targeted probiotic, especially if you've used an antibiotic or you know your gut microbiome
is not where it should be, absolutely will help move the needle. So think about the fermented foods and the fiber
the polyphenols as the foundation, but then, yes, in addition, for most people, I think a probiotic
is necessary. I take one nearly every single day. Another common question is, what's better?
Fiber or fermented foods? Oh, that's tough. I actually think that fiber is more important,
but I do think for a lot of people, fermented foods have loads of benefits. You know, there's a study
out of Stanford in 2021, and they thought fermented foods actually raised your diversity the most. So fiber,
increase the growth generally the most, but then fermented foods created more diversity. So
fiber helps you go deep and build more, but fermented foods help you go wider. So really,
they act synergistically together. Another question, how long until it changes? As I mentioned,
two to four days, your change can happen pretty quickly in your gut microbiome. Here's another one.
Are artificial sweeteners bad for your gut? I mean, some are, you know, some studies show that saccharin and sucralose
appear to change your gut microbiome.
So they don't get a free pass.
I would say you're better off doing honey.
By the way, honey and manuka honey specifically
is probably the best form of carbohydrate
for balancing out your gut microbiome.
So if you're going to use a sweetener,
honey should be your number one sweetener.
After that, monk fruit, stevia, alulose,
I think are the next best options.
Another question here is leaky gut real.
Yeah, there are now thousands of studies, thousands on intestinal permeability and its connection to
everything from autoimmune disease to mood disorders, inflammatory bowel disease, headaches,
a number of conditions. And so, yes, leaky gut absolutely is real. If you look up and go to PubMed and
look up intestinal permeability, you will see thousands of studies there. Here's another question.
This is a really good one. Why do I get?
get histamine reactions. Here's why. It is connected to your gut. Dispiosis. And here's what typically
happens. You have a bacteria like H. pylori. And bacteria should really be living in your colon.
If they go from your colon and up into your large intestine, but they get all the way up into your
small intestine, like a condition called SIBO, that's small intestinal bacterial overgrowth,
they shouldn't be up there. It's not the right environment. This can start to create.
create more of what we call. It can lower something called DAO. It's an enzyme that sort of clears out
some of the histamine creation. And that can create those histamine reactions. Here's what I found clinically.
Lowering stress, the single biggest needle mover for reducing histamine. Okay. So that's just not overworking.
Just going on more walks around your meals. Liquorice root extract like chewables tend to be good for
for that. Ginger. Just moving your body. So walking, reducing stress.
Ginger and licorice are some of the biggest things that will start to help to reset your body.
And then if you are going to, and then staying away from fermented foods, vinegar, really acidic foods, all of those things are going to help.
And if you have histamine reactions, you actually don't want to take traditional probiotics or fiber.
You want to take soil-based organisms.
And you also want to take sun fiber or pHGG as I mentioned earlier as your main source of fiber.
Another question, does stress really change my gut? Absolutely. Chronic stress actually shifts your entire community. It weakens your gut barrier. Of all the things I've mentioned, outside of antibiotic drugs, which are probably the most damaging, stress is probably the most damaging to your gut microbiome. Here's another question. Do I need a microbiome test? Here's what I would say. Start to make the changes that I shared with you. And if you still haven't seen the changes you want, then I'm
I would encourage you to see a practitioner at the Health Institute or the longevity clinic
or find a good functional med doc and get a GI map.
So if you try what I just shared with you and you have a plan that's created for you
and you follow the plan that I generally laid out for you and you still need some help,
then yes, getting a GI map, seeing a practitioner can be a great idea if you need additional help.
Now here are four things to remember.
You're half microbe, half of the molecules in your body, those are microbes.
Okay, the ecosystem is part of who you are. They're a critical organ. Number two, the gut talks to your other organs, especially your brain. Okay. This is why you want to optimize your gut because it impacts every cell organ tissue of your body. Number three, breakdown is a chain reaction, right? Low fiber, low polyphenol intake, not enough movement, poor sleep, stress, taking antibiotics or glyphosate,
Those create this downward reaction eventually leading to inflammation, autoimmune disease, obesity, and
chronic illness. Number four, food is the fastest lover. More plants, more variety, more fiber will move
the needle the fastest for the health of your gut microbiome. And hey, before you go, I have three quick favors
to ask. Three might seem like a lot. So maybe just do one of these. Okay. Number one, subscribe. Okay,
hey, listen, stop guessing about your health. Every week on the show, I'm diving down.
deep into how to heal using natural medicine.
If you're not subscribed, you are missing out on some incredible upcoming interviews and
guests.
You're not subscribed.
It won't show up in your feed.
By the way, it's also the number one thing you can do to support the show.
So thank you all of you for subscribing.
Number two, share.
Think about somebody that could benefit from this.
And number three, here is my gift to you.
I created a free gut reset guide that walks you through exactly how to heal your gut
microbiom. You can go to the show notes and the link will be in there and download that.
If you want to learn everything I talked about today, but even deeper and have it on hand,
this is a PDF I created that goes through all of this and so much more in detail in terms of
a protocol. You can find that in the show notes. And here's my gift to you for all of you that
are watching on YouTube. Is I created a free gut reset guide. If you want to know exactly how to
heal and transform your gut microbiome and even more detail than I shared on the show today,
come at gut reset and I will send you my free gut reset guide.
This goes through the top supplements, the top herbs, the top foods, meal ideas,
the top biomarkers, everything you need to do to reset and heal your gut microbiome.
It also has all of the research links of all the studies we talked about and so much more as part of that free guide.
So remember this.
If you heal your gut, it changes everything in your body, not just your gut, every cell, every tissue, every organ.
so up your fiber, up your plant variety, up your probiotics. If you do that, you're going to have a
healthier gut microbiome for it. Also I want to say, thanks so much for tuning in the show.
Remember every week I'm diving deep in how to heal your body physically, mentally, spiritually,
and take your health and life to the next level. I'll see you on the next episode.
