Microscope image of intestinal fungus. (img thx to weneedideas.ca)
Yes! Wonderful research. It’s about time someone finally looked for yeast in the GI tract. The problem is, we can’t find things if we don’t look for them. And who started all of the interest in yeast? You (the individuals) did! People have been talking about yeast in the digestive tract for decades. It was just common sense. But it has taken that long for science to finally catch on. And how much longer will it take for the medical system to catch on? It will be many more years. Don’t wait for that. Find someone who will consider the possibility of yeast now. If you have any digestive problem, not just Crohn’s disease or Ulcerative Colitis, yeast could be involved. At our clinic we have to treat patients for this problem every single day!
From Wired:
Fungi are the latest addition to human menagerie, joining bacteria and viruses in forming the teeming, biological kingdom-spanning superorganisms of our bodies.
“We were all fascinated with the diversity and sheer mass of microorganisms that live inside our intestines,” said immunobiologist David Underhill of the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center. “So we started asking: What do we know about fungus in the gut?”
In a June 8 Science study, researchers led by Underhill and postdoctoral student Ilian Iliev link gut fungus to colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease.
While the findings may be presently useful to colitis researchers, the implications are sweeping: Scientists might ask the same questions of internal fungi as they do internal bacteria, the importance of which is now a buzzing research frontier.
In the last decade, researchers have linked resident communities of bacteria — which outnumber human cells in a body by 10 to 1 — to diseases and fundamental processes, from diabetes and heart disease to metabolism and immune system function. Even viruses are in on the act.
Appreciation of this so-called microbiome represents a sea change in awareness of bacteria: No longer are they external entities that sometimes cause disease, but rather an essential, positive component of human health.
Whether fungi also play a part is a question relatively few researchers have asked. A handful of studies have suggested a limited role, primarily in skin and mouth conditions.
Click here to read this article in its entirety on Wired.com.
Image thanks to weneedideas.ca