
Gut issues? 6 drinks recommended by Stanford doctor could be your cure
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1. For gut healing: Kefir or buttermilk
Kefir. (istock. Image used for representative purpose only)
2. For digestion: Ginger tea
3. For constipation: Prune juice
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4. For bloating: Peppermint tea
Peppermint tea. (istock. Image used for representative purpose only)
5. For diarrhoea: Coconut water
Coconut water (istock. Image used for representative purpose only)
6. For fatty liver: Black coffee
In a world flooded with energy drinks, carbonated sodas, and sugar-laden smoothies, your gut might just be begging for something gentler—and smarter. According to Stanford-trained gastroenterologist Dr. Saurabh Sethi, the secret to better digestion and a healthier gut doesn't lie in fancy supplements or detox fads. It's in your kitchen—or at least your nearest grocery store. From kefir to coconut water, Dr. Sethi highlights simple, accessible beverages that can support everything from constipation and bloating to diarrhoea and liver health.Kefir tops the list when it comes to restoring your gut microbiome. This fermented milk drink is loaded with probiotics, including Lactobacillus kefiri, a powerful bacteria known to fight harmful microbes like Salmonella and E. coli. Buttermilk also gets a nod from the Harvard graduate for its lactic acid content, which boosts acidity, extends shelf life, and wards off unwanted bacterial growth—all while lending it that signature tangy taste.There's a reason ginger tea is a go-to home remedy across generations. Warming and soothing, it's especially effective after a heavy meal or during colder months. Whether brewed from dried ginger tea bags or steeped from fresh ginger root, this spicy-sweet drink stimulates digestion and calms the stomach. A slice of lemon and a drizzle of honey turn it into a treat that heals and satisfies.If you're battling sluggish bowels, reach for prune juice instead. Studies have found that prunes are rich in fibre and sorbitol and naturally encourage bowel movements and help relieve chronic constipation, a common issue in older adults and young children alike.Peppermint tea is more than just refreshing—it can actually calm your gut. Animal studies show that peppermint relaxes the digestive tract, preventing painful spasms and reducing gas. You can make it from store-bought tea bags or steep a handful of fresh leaves at home. Bonus: it's caffeine-free, so you can sip it any time of day.Coconut water is a naturally hydrating drink and a popular alternative to commercial sports beverages. Rich in essential electrolytes like potassium, sodium, magnesium, and calcium, it helps maintain the body's fluid balance. Thanks to this nutrient profile, coconut water is especially beneficial during bouts of diarrhoea, when the body loses fluids and electrolytes. In fact, studies have shown that coconut water is effective in treating mild dehydration caused by diarrhoea and performs on par with sports drinks when it comes to replenishing lost electrolytes.Dr Saurabh Sethi claims that the best beverage for those with fatty liver is black coffee.

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Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Harvard doctor has urgent advice. Ditch these 8 everyday toxins from your life ASAP
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NDTV
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- NDTV
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Hindustan Times
16 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Seeing Silicon: A bot to tackle blood clots
When I first saw a demo of the milli-spinner in Stanford Robotics Center, it reminded me of a 1966 film Fantastic Voyage in which a submarine crew is shrunk to microscopic size and ventures into the body of an injured scientist to repair the damage to his brain. Except scientists at the Stanford University imagined a more efficient way of dispensing targeted drug inside a human body – a worm-sized robot that can travel through veins and compress a blood clot, treating strokes and heart attacks. The milli-spinner prototype takes up a small display in the medical robotics room. What looms in the room when I enter are larger robots used for imaging and surgery. The millirobot in comparison is less than one centimeter in size. It moves like a tiny worm inside a web of transparent tubes, controlled by a magnetic field. The hollow tube, barely visible unless you bend closer and have a look, rotates rapidly using a series of slits. It was this movement that took mechanical engineer Dr Renee Zhao, the head of the lab and the creator of the robot, years to master. The movement made all the difference. 'With existing technology, there was no way to reduce the size of a blood clot. They relied on deforming and rupturing the clot to remove it,' explains Dr Zhao, assistant professor of mechanical engineering. Once they got the spinning right, the milli-spinner could enter the body through a catheter, draw the clot and compress it before suctioning it out. In a recent scientific paper published in Nature in June 2025, Dr Zhao and her team showed that this new approach to technology – compression before suction - outperformed available treatments in removal of clots from human bloodstream. 'At first, we simply wondered whether this suction could help remove a blood clot,' Zhao said. 'But when we tested the spinner on a clot, we observed a dramatic reduction in volume. Honestly, it felt like magic.' Also Read: Seeing Silicon | Is this year the beginning of the end of smartphones? The more I see and read about the upcoming technologies in medical devices, the more magical it does feel. Stanford's not the first one to develop millirobots, though Zhao has a lot of experience working on millirobots. After the microelectronic advances in the early 2000s, microfabrication allowed engineers to create intricate mechanical and electronic components on a microscopic scale. Due to their small size, microrobots (about one centimetre) and millirobots (less than one centimetre) could be made cheap and could be used in large numbers – like in swarm robotics. However, there was one challenge, and it took technologists another decade to solve it. How do you make these millirobots move through the body without them being tethered to a power source? The microrobots came with small lightweight battery sources but it wasn't enough for them to navigate inside blood vessels or reach hard to reach places. (Just like Fantastic Voyage shows, our blood vessels are complicated rivers to navigate). It was with Wi-Fi, another technology that has dramatically changed our lives, that scientists finally figured out how to control the device inside the body. This level of control meant that these millirobots could become quite useful to deliver precision medicine inside the human body. They could also be used to minimally invasive surgery, diagnostics or navigating blood vessels for treatment. The last decade has seen a flurry of experiments in medical millirobots, the Stanford experiment being one of the latest successful examples of the technology. Some of them have already made it to our hospitals and treatment. For example, biohybrid microswimmers which are created using bacteria, microalgae have been used for advanced medical functions – like targeted therapy of tumours. But most innovations are still in laboratories of research institutions. The next level to these kinds of robots is xenobots, the world's first living robots – built from the heart muscle and stem cells harvested from an early African frog embryo. These AI-designed robots are less than 1 millimetre wide, can simulate a specific task and can work in swarms. They use energy from fat and protein naturally stored in their tissue, which lasts about a week at which point they simply turn into dead skin cells. Future possible uses are treating individuals by creating xenobots using their own cells (reducing the immune response challenge with bots inside your body) and even to aggregate tiny bits of ocean-polluting microplastics into a large ball of plastic to recycle. The latest biorobotics does feel like magic rather than technology, just as Dr Zhao felt when she saw the milli-spinner compress the blood clot. More and more, the technological advances in biomedicine do sound like alchemy to me. Shweta Taneja is an author and journalist based in the Bay Area. Her fortnightly column will reflect on how emerging tech and science are reshaping society in Silicon Valley and beyond. Find her online with @shwetawrites. The views expressed are personal.