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Why a healthy gut microbiome could protect against dementia, and what you should eat

Why a healthy gut microbiome could protect against dementia, and what you should eat

This is the 62nd instalment in a series on
dementia , including the research into its causes and treatment, advice for carers, and stories of hope.
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What you eat affects your brain.
Food affects cardiovascular health, blood sugar levels and blood pressure. All of these can influence brain health since the gut is connected to the brain via the
gut-brain axis
For some time, it has been accepted that gut health may affect mental health, but increasingly doctors believe it could play a significant role in brain health, too.
Millions of microbes – bacteria, fungi, viruses – live in our gastrointestinal tract, forming our
gut microbiome , which plays a key role in many facets of health – including
immunity.
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An out-of-balance microbiome can lead to a variety of diseases.
Professor Simon Carding, who leads the Food, Microbiome and Health Research Programme at the Quadram Institute Bioscience in Norfolk in the UK, says that understanding more about the link between our gut and our brains could help prevent diseases like dementia.

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