For decades, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease were viewed primarily as brain disorders. Emerging research reveals a profound ...
UCL researchers have found that shifts in gut bacteria may be an important early signal to watch for to identify Parkinson's ...
Coffee doesn’t just energize—it actively reshapes the gut and mind. Researchers found that both caffeinated and decaf coffee ...
A large international study suggests gut microbiome changes may help identify the risk for Parkinson’s disease, including in ...
Brain fog is the result of “bad connections” between the gut and the brain, said Gerard Clarke, a professor of ...
Leigh Weddle, PharmD, is a board-certified pharmacist specializing in medication therapy management based in Kansas City, Missouri. She also has expertise in chronic disease management, microbiome and ...
Study in Nature Communications links coffee consumption to gut health and improved mood, exploring impacts on microbiome and ...
"The gut microbiome is a ripe target for future treatments that could potentially stop or slow PD progression at an early ...
There's no scientific evidence that the gut microbiome causes autism, a group of scientists argue in an opinion paper publishing November 13 in the Cell Press journal Neuron. They point to the fact ...
Think of your gut microbiome as a community of microscopic organisms that live inside your body. When everything is working right, this ecosystem helps protect you from a host of diseases.
Migraine attacks are more than bad headaches. They’re the result of highly complex processes that don’t work as well as they should. Scientists know some of them already and are starting to learn more ...
THERE’S A REASON that your gut is nicknamed the “second brain.” According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, the walls of the ...