A few years ago, doctors began noticing something unusual about many patients who were later diagnosed with Parkinson disease ...
Coffee doesn’t just energize—it actively reshapes the gut and mind. Researchers found that both caffeinated and decaf coffee ...
The Hearty Soul on MSN
The gut-brain connection: What science now knows
Most people think of the gut as a digestive organ. Something that processes food, absorbs nutrients, and occasionally causes ...
Recent research published in Circulation Research provides evidence that a specific molecule produced by gut bacteria can ...
For decades, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease were viewed primarily as brain disorders. Emerging research reveals a profound ...
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. For years, I’ve treated patients whose symptoms didn’t fit neatly into any one diagnosis. Brain fog with no ...
It’s not a connection most people make, but stress doesn’t just affect your mood—it can show up in your gut, too. A growing body of research points to the gut–brain axis as the link between gut health ...
The human body is packed with natural rhythms, from your sleep-wake cycle to the steady pulsing of blood through the brain to heart rate and pulse. Now, scientists say the gut may hold the key to ...
For years, mental health was seen as something that started and ended in the brain. But an expanding field of research is revealing a key player in the story of our emotions: the gut. The trillions of ...
The far-flung organs of the gastrointestinal tract and the central nervous system are inextricably connected, and the growing body of scientific literature surrounding the ‘gut-brain axis’ is ...
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