What can you tell me about probiotics vitamins?
JollyHodgers87
Posts: 165 Member
I have finally heard about gut yeast (candida flora) and how it negatively effects your body. After finding out that pro biotics and decreasing sugar intake could help kill gut yeast and promote the good bacteria growth in my stomach, I've decided to start taking a supplement. I mean I'm constantly getting sick, my memory gets foggy, and I have digestive problems, so it only makes sence! As of yesterday, I take the chewable acidophilus probiotic vitamins.
Anyone else take them?
How long did it take for them to aid in your health issues like sinus problems and such?
How long did it take you to lose weight taking them?
As you can tell, I'm excited that this might help me! I'm also hoping it does because the bottle of vitamins was a whopping $20 at walmart which seems expensive to me so I hope it's worth the effort. I've also been eating yogurt on top of this. Thanks.
Anyone else take them?
How long did it take for them to aid in your health issues like sinus problems and such?
How long did it take you to lose weight taking them?
As you can tell, I'm excited that this might help me! I'm also hoping it does because the bottle of vitamins was a whopping $20 at walmart which seems expensive to me so I hope it's worth the effort. I've also been eating yogurt on top of this. Thanks.
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Replies
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Your diet will affect your health more than taking a supplement. Supplements are SO over hyped and exaggerated. 90% of all supplements on the market are uneeded. Oh and don't fall for the candida thing.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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I don't know about the vitamins, but I DO take kefir--especially when I'm on an antibiotic. My hubby has also been on HMF-Replete probiotic for years now (he takes a little each day--not the recommended entire sachet) and it has helped immensely with his acid reflux to the point he's no longer on nexium. Most good probiotics though are going to be refrigerated--because heat tends to kill them. At least that's what I've found when researching it.0
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Your diet will affect your health more than taking a supplement. Supplements are SO over hyped and exaggerated. 90% of all supplements on the market are uneeded. Oh and don't fall for the candida thing.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutritionYour diet will affect your health more than taking a supplement. Supplements are SO over hyped and exaggerated. 90% of all supplements on the market are uneeded. Oh and don't fall for the candida thing.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
Definitely keeping the diet in check as well. I think that's important too!0 -
I don't know about the vitamins, but I DO take kefir--especially when I'm on an antibiotic. My hubby has also been on HMF-Replete probiotic for years now (he takes a little each day--not the recommended entire sachet) and it has helped immensely with his acid reflux to the point he's no longer on nexium. Most good probiotics though are going to be refrigerated--because heat tends to kill them. At least that's what I've found when researching it.
I have bad acid reflux as well. And I take a prescription for the acid reflux too. Maybe I should keep my vitamins in the refridgerator then. Thanks!
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Just wondering if anyone has tried it and had good results.
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I was dieting and working out and despite that could NOT lose weight. I was at a plateau for more than a year. Totally frustrated! There is a LOT of evidence that gut flora impacts depression, weight loss and perhaps even Alzheimer's and Autism. So I started taking Ultimte Flora and have lost 8 lbs in the last two months. Yes, I am still working out and dieting but NOW I am actually losing weight.0
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I was dieting and working out and despite that could NOT lose weight. I was at a plateau for more than a year. Totally frustrated! There is a LOT of evidence that gut flora impacts depression, weight loss and perhaps even Alzheimer's and Autism. So I started taking Ultimte Flora and have lost 8 lbs in the last two months. Yes, I am still working out and dieting but NOW I am actually losing weight.
That's awesome! Congrats!!!
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i have crohns and sometimes dont um... poo... for 2 weeks.. yea its fun. So i take probiotics and eat a lot of food like kimchi, yougurt and keifer. If i take fiber its messes me up oppisite so i have to use food.0
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Eating right will be 90% of your success. Opinion.
Stopping the excess sugar, processed foods, and general garbage will make you fell better.
If anything consider taking a one a day vitamin instead.
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I was overprescribed antibiotics. Then I was incorrectly prescribed a med that caused me to not be able to eat a lot of foods, could barely sleep for fours a night, extreme stress for six + months because it has caused chronic nerve pain in my face and eyes. I stopped being able to digest foods such as quinoa. I have a lot of health conditions now. And I was incredibly healthy before being incorrectly prescribed meds. So, my doctor has me taking probiotics. Also cultured foods such as kefir, wildbrine sauerkraut, maybe kombucha. Diet and lifestyle will have the best impact. Probiotics can help after antibiotics, etc. I am still dealing, trying to recover, undergoing testing. So, I don't know what the best ones are. A lot of doctors recommend: Ultimate Flora, VSL#3, Align, Prescipt Assist. I am taking New Roots Probiotic Intensity and Progressive HCP 150. I have improved. But, definitely not better. I can't advise until I am better. And also different conditions call for different treatment.0
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wstephens87 wrote: »I have finally heard about gut yeast (candida flora) and how it negatively effects your body. After finding out that pro biotics and decreasing sugar intake could help kill gut yeast and promote the good bacteria growth in my stomach, I've decided to start taking a supplement. I mean I'm constantly getting sick, my memory gets foggy, and I have digestive problems, so it only makes sence! As of yesterday, I take the chewable acidophilus probiotic vitamins.
Anyone else take them?
How long did it take for them to aid in your health issues like sinus problems and such?
How long did it take you to lose weight taking them?
As you can tell, I'm excited that this might help me! I'm also hoping it does because the bottle of vitamins was a whopping $20 at walmart which seems expensive to me so I hope it's worth the effort. I've also been eating yogurt on top of this. Thanks.
Your symptoms actually sound more like a mold allergy or other environmental illness. Do you live or work anywhere with a leaky roof or leaky pipes? Have you had new carpet installed recently? Other renovation?
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wstephens87 wrote: »Just wondering if anyone has tried it and had good results.
The main benefit to me of probiotics is prevention of yeast infections, and they work well for that. I pay $21.66 for a four month supply, and do not consider that expensive. Now Foods, Gr8-Dophilus, 120 Vcaps.
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I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.0 -
I never had acne in my life. I developed it after medical injuries. It last for a few months. Started probiotics and now completely clear again in just a few weeks. The dermatologist wanted to put me on Accutane.
Also from medical injury: my tummy looked pregnant, pain, weigh 95 pounds can't gain back lost weight, not digesting food.
Started probiotic. This morning my tummy is flat with visible abs again.
Only problem is that I was also medically injured by a vasoconstrictor. That causes severe nerve pain when I eat probiotics and fermented foods because I have a histamine reaction. So, I have to try and recover my health without damaging my face with debilitating nerve pain. Wonderful how doctors have injured me and responded to my injury by injuring me more.0 -
Your diet will affect your health more than taking a supplement. Supplements are SO over hyped and exaggerated. 90% of all supplements on the market are uneeded. Oh and don't fall for the candida thing.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
What do you mean by the bolded?0 -
I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »Your diet will affect your health more than taking a supplement. Supplements are SO over hyped and exaggerated. 90% of all supplements on the market are uneeded. Oh and don't fall for the candida thing.
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
What do you mean by the bolded?
A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
IDEA Fitness member
Kickboxing Certified Instructor
Been in fitness for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition
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I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
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I've used them in the past after being on a course of antibiotics. I had my gall bladder out a couple of years ago, and have taken them since because I wanted to see if they help me with some of the digestive problems in the wake of the operation. What I've found is reducing the fat in my diet seems to do more for me than the probiotics. BTW, probiotics are not vitamins, they're live cultures of gut bacteria.0
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michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Prevention is a horrible source and is just an advertising vehicle for the alternative health industry so not even interested in looking at that. The published data, and serveral side sources I looked at are so tenuous they say nothing other than this is an interesting area that might show some promise but too early to tell. Not saying that there isn't an effect, since anything in the body can cause reactions that might show up in unexpected ways in behaviour etc but it's just too early to know if this is just a wild goose chase or something that will prove useful.
ETA even if there is some promise here we have no idea yet about treatment and interventions so attempting to manipulating your gut flora based on a still speculative theory wouldn't be wise. If we don't know the basic effects how does one know how to treat it?0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.
You need to do you, but you can't make a blanket statement like "probiotics have nothing to do with depression" when you are clearly uneducated about the topic. And I'm not using google as a source, I'm using google to find reputable sources.
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Wheelhouse15 wrote: »michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Prevention is a horrible source and is just an advertising vehicle for the alternative health industry so not even interested in looking at that. The published data, and serveral side sources I looked at are so tenuous they say nothing other than this is an interesting area that might show some promise but too early to tell. Not saying that there isn't an effect, since anything in the body can cause reactions that might show up in unexpected ways in behaviour etc but it's just too early to know if this is just a wild goose chase or something that will prove useful.
Valid, I just linked the first few articles I came across.
There is a lot of research out there know regarding Gut Flora, and the effects on overall health when it is out of whack. It's even been linked to Autism. I'm not going to make a blanket statement that SIBO, Candida, Gut Flora, etc. are the end all be all of all other ailments, but I am on the side that thinks that we at least need to research more and learn more about the human body and our systems to see the effects on our overall health. We're still learning and I'm not going to dismiss a relatively new potential cause of various ailments.
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michelle172415 wrote: »michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.
You need to do you, but you can't make a blanket statement like "probiotics have nothing to do with depression" when you are clearly uneducated about the topic. And I'm not using google as a source, I'm using google to find reputable sources.
Nope. I am pretty confident I can say that.
It is also a horrible idea and irresponsible to suggest probiotics can help with depression, especially when the sources say there "could" be a correlation. Someone could read that and say "oh well I guess I don't need my antidepressants, I should just take probiotics".0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »Wheelhouse15 wrote: »michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Prevention is a horrible source and is just an advertising vehicle for the alternative health industry so not even interested in looking at that. The published data, and serveral side sources I looked at are so tenuous they say nothing other than this is an interesting area that might show some promise but too early to tell. Not saying that there isn't an effect, since anything in the body can cause reactions that might show up in unexpected ways in behaviour etc but it's just too early to know if this is just a wild goose chase or something that will prove useful.
Valid, I just linked the first few articles I came across.
There is a lot of research out there know regarding Gut Flora, and the effects on overall health when it is out of whack. It's even been linked to Autism. I'm not going to make a blanket statement that SIBO, Candida, Gut Flora, etc. are the end all be all of all other ailments, but I am on the side that thinks that we at least need to research more and learn more about the human body and our systems to see the effects on our overall health. We're still learning and I'm not going to dismiss a relatively new potential cause of various ailments.
I'm all for more research where the facts indicate promise, but their is little real evidence of linnks to issues such as Autism etc, they are still just theories. The big issue is not the correctness of the theories to me, it's the use of unproven treatments that aren't even based on what little we know. Of the billions of microbes in your gut, which are good and which are bad? We know that some react negatively with certain genes for some physical ailments as one of our regular posters can attest to, but until we know more about the affects of various bacteria on brain chemistry it would be foolish to try to manipulate it intentionally for such effects. At best, it might be somewhat beneficial, but that would be more luck than anything else; most-likely it will just be a waste of time and money, and at worst it might do harm to you.0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.
Huh?
90% of the body's serotonin is located in the gut.
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ClubSilencio wrote: »michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.
Huh?
90% of the body's serotonin is located in the gut.
Correct, but it won't passs the blood-brain barrier.0 -
Just to be clear, I am not advocating people get off their depression meds and take probiotics instead. *rolls eyes*
As I said in my earlier post, your health (both mental and physical) is not solved or destroyed by one single action, supplement, drug or anything else. Probiotics are not going to be the single thing that fixes one particular problem.
Everyone who suffers from depression or any mental illness needs to be responsible for working with their doctor/therapist/psychiatrist for their own comprehensive treatment. Hopefully they are not using some off-hand comment on a forum to completely overhaul their depression treatment.
As someone who suffers from chronic depression & has tried medication, therapy and various other treatments over my lifetime, I was simply sharing how one small piece of my entire lifestyle is contributing to my mental state.
OP asked people to share how probiotics had influenced their lives in various ways & I was simply sharing how they have influenced mine.
Relax.0 -
People shouldn't get off their meds if it's unwise and unsafe for them. Although they can with medical guidance if they are experiencing adverse reactions and side effects.
I am only going to discuss one neurotransmitter. Histamine. The bacteria in my gut causes nerve pain in my face because of histamine reactions. Histamine has many functions as part of the immune system, hormone activity, and a neurotransmitter. I honestly haven't looked into it all that much. It's a personal medical issue for me. So, of course I try to avoid debilitating pain in my face. So, I have looked into it to the degree that I need to and will continue to as needed. But, I don't come here armed with sources at the moment.0 -
michelle172415 wrote: »michelle172415 wrote: »I suffer from/have suffered from sinus issues & depression. My aunt (who has gluten & dairy allergies) recommended a brand of probiotic. Of course, I can't remember the brand right now...
Anyway, I take them on weekdays when I remember. My sinus issues have been much better. My depression is doing very well right now. I'm not seeing it contribute to my weight loss though. I've never had much trouble pooping or anything, so no changes there.
As others have said, probiotics are just one piece in a large puzzle. You have to supplement the probiotic with exercise, healthy diet (low sugar, low processed food), etc. Just diet alone will not always work, as some people actually need help rebuilding their gut flora. Beware of foods that say they have probiotics in them. Not that they're bad, just that our modern food processing (homoginization, pasturazing, etc) kills the good bacteria with the bad. That's why many people have started fermenting their own foods & taking probiotics.
Probiotics have nothing to do with depression.
You're wrong.
http://www.prevention.com/mind-body/probiotics-antidepressants
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25470391
http://www.livescience.com/49248-gut-bacteria-mental-health.html
Google it, there are tons of articles out there.
Google is not a good source of scientific information.
Please explain how probiotics that can effect guy bacteria have anything to do neurotransmitters in the brain.
Yeah-I think I'll stick to my psych meds instead of trying probiotics.
You need to do you, but you can't make a blanket statement like "probiotics have nothing to do with depression" when you are clearly uneducated about the topic. And I'm not using google as a source, I'm using google to find reputable sources.
Nope. I am pretty confident I can say that.
It is also a horrible idea and irresponsible to suggest probiotics can help with depression, especially when the sources say there "could" be a correlation. Someone could read that and say "oh well I guess I don't need my antidepressants, I should just take probiotics".
Surely it couldn't hurt to take probiotics alongside antidepressant meds... Who knows, it may make a positive difference.1
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