Incredibly interesting - I think researching the specific gut microbiomes of people with autoimmune disease might hold massive treatment potential. If you can identify harmful bacteria and restore balance through some antagonistic bacteria introduction that would be incredible. Personally diagnosed with AI disease 3 weeks ago and really hope this research bears fruit for everyone suffering currently.
@@epicchannel4724 hmm that would be something... There is no evidence for this is there? I did have cv19 6 weeks prior to my AI diagnosis... but perhaps cv19 simply triggered something that was already there in my body - hard to say
@@__Wanderer Yes we do have evidence but it's not conclusive. One thing that is conclusive is the effect on gut microbiome. Chicken and egg if you know what I mean.
@@epicchannel4724 mhmm yep hard to catch it in the act without a priori* measurements. Personally was diagnosed with ms but it would be surprising if cv19 caused that, perhaps it is just a shock to the system that allows it to surface (had/currently have severe optic neuritis - almost blind in one eye). But indeed for me it was a perfect storm prior to diagnosis - I had cv19 and the month afterwards had one of the most stressful months of my life. Perhaps a bad recipe for my gut health / inflammation levels. Anyway will keep an eye out for any research in that direction :)
Thanks for uploading, this was very informative. We know so much, but we know so little... I am glad we are starting to understand this, but I guess it may well be another 50 years until the research finds its way into medical practice.
Only if they decide to not act on the new science. It doesn't take 50 years to create treatments. It takes 50 years to protect the pharmaceutical industry.
Kings College (London) did a major study using the Zoe app (originally designed for twin studies, later also used for studying diet, currently expanded to include covid) of over a million people’s dietary supplements and response to covid. Apart from vitamin D, probiotics was something that had positive protective effects against the disease (multivitamins and garlic didn’t!)
Wow, fascinating! I have IBS. Last year I trabelled to Japan for a month and my gut was much healthier. My diet while I was there changed significantly, but Im also wondering if I was introduced to a wider variety of gut bacteria? Very interesting to think about.
Wondering if food alone can inoculate or revive a dispersed microbiome after a chronic condition since he’s not too thrilled behind the probiotic phenomenon...
My GI doctor recommended psyllium husk/powder to help build back my good bacteria etc. I take a tbsp in the morning and another one after dinner. I’m pleased with the outcome. It taken months and will probably longer before I get back to normal.
Yeah I would think so. People before us never had all the kinds of food we have now so they survived from the earth. Water, veggies and fruits. Hardly ever got sick unlike our world now yunno
Incredibly interesting - I think researching the specific gut microbiomes of people with autoimmune disease might hold massive treatment potential. If you can identify harmful bacteria and restore balance through some antagonistic bacteria introduction that would be incredible. Personally diagnosed with AI disease 3 weeks ago and really hope this research bears fruit for everyone suffering currently.
Could you imagine if CV19 was a bacteriophage?
@@epicchannel4724 hmm that would be something... There is no evidence for this is there? I did have cv19 6 weeks prior to my AI diagnosis... but perhaps cv19 simply triggered something that was already there in my body - hard to say
@@__Wanderer Yes we do have evidence but it's not conclusive. One thing that is conclusive is the effect on gut microbiome. Chicken and egg if you know what I mean.
@@epicchannel4724 mhmm yep hard to catch it in the act without a priori* measurements. Personally was diagnosed with ms but it would be surprising if cv19 caused that, perhaps it is just a shock to the system that allows it to surface (had/currently have severe optic neuritis - almost blind in one eye). But indeed for me it was a perfect storm prior to diagnosis - I had cv19 and the month afterwards had one of the most stressful months of my life. Perhaps a bad recipe for my gut health / inflammation levels. Anyway will keep an eye out for any research in that direction :)
@@__Wanderer Have a look on UA-cam for some of "Vegon Health" latest videos.
Hope you have a speedy and full recovery.
Thanks for uploading, this was very informative. We know so much, but we know so little... I am glad we are starting to understand this, but I guess it may well be another 50 years until the research finds its way into medical practice.
Only if they decide to not act on the new science. It doesn't take 50 years to create treatments. It takes 50 years to protect the pharmaceutical industry.
Huge respects sir
Great talk!
Thank you Dr Berg!
This is a serious inquiry: Kissing exchanges bacteria, etc. How much can kissing healthy people affect/improve a person’s microbiome?
Might be quite significant in both diversity and stabilization.
Kings College (London) did a major study using the Zoe app (originally designed for twin studies, later also used for studying diet, currently expanded to include covid) of over a million people’s dietary supplements and response to covid. Apart from vitamin D, probiotics was something that had positive protective effects against the disease (multivitamins and garlic didn’t!)
Wow, fascinating! I have IBS. Last year I trabelled to Japan for a month and my gut was much healthier. My diet while I was there changed significantly, but Im also wondering if I was introduced to a wider variety of gut bacteria? Very interesting to think about.
Did it change when you got back home?
Who cares if you incredible bicep strength
@@shaunlastname391 bruh
I sorry, where did you find any viruses? Can you show viruses in real time?
Minute 21 , may it cause ra?
Wondering if food alone can inoculate or revive a dispersed microbiome after a chronic condition since he’s not too thrilled behind the probiotic phenomenon...
My GI doctor recommended psyllium husk/powder to help build back my good bacteria etc. I take a tbsp in the morning and another one after dinner. I’m pleased with the outcome. It taken months and will probably longer before I get back to normal.
@@ernestscuttle9139 I just incorporated dietary fiber and using food sources to help the same way. I hope I have a good outcome like you have.
Yeah I would think so. People before us never had all the kinds of food we have now so they survived from the earth. Water, veggies and fruits. Hardly ever got sick unlike our world now yunno
You could but you'd need to put two big bolts in it, get a big swinging switch and wait till its a lightning storm
Ketogenic diet also reduces tumor sizes. Probably better yet carnivorous.
Where is the fight against the sterilization of America from all the microbiologists
They are busy farting on slides for Fauci
Miracle Poop..i think i need
this to fix my microbiome..
Gut Problems
thc restores the microbiome
Big fat biomes are better when you're stoned though
Who is the jerk that corrected the speaker in the middle of his presentation?
Not me
💘
Amazing!