One Awesome Effect Eating Yogurt May Have on Your Brain

Since earlier studies have linked gastrointestinal microbiota—the trillions of bacteria in the digestive tract—to brain health

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University College Cork researchers investigated if this association could affect an aging brain.

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Professors transplanted "good" gut bacteria from young (3–4 months) or elderly (19–20 months) mice into old mice. After brain scans and tests like the rodent maze

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 the authors found that mice given the "adolescent" microbiome had less anxiety, a characteristic Alzheimer's disease symptom, and better memory and cognitive function.

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The scans showed that their brains had chemicals and gene patterns like a juvenile mouse's. The latest findings were reported in Nature Aging.

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"This new research is a potential game-changer, as we have established that the microbiome can be harnessed to reverse age-related brain deterioration

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University College Cork professor and vice president for research and innovation John F. Cryan in a press statement.

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Despite saying this discovery is still in its "early days," a colleague and research center head said

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The study opens up possibilities in the future to modulate gut microbiota as a therapeutic target to influence brain health."

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The Alzheimer's Association reports that over six million Americans have this brain illness, which slowly impairs memory, thinking, and reasoning

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 The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report that Alzheimer's, the most common form of dementia, doubles every five years after 65.

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