You may not know this, but you are home to a colony of bacteria. You may also not know it, but the health and happiness of that colony of bacteria have a direct effect on your own health and happiness. In short, if we are what we eat, then we may need to make bacteria part of our balanced breakfast. Microbes are single-celled organisms. They are literally everywhere. Microbes are in the air we breathe, on the surfaces of everything we touch, and inside our bodies. Microbes can be bacteria, fungi, protozoa, or viruses.
A few years ago, scientists began studying the microbial life of our stomachs. Called The American Gut project, this study aims to understand the life of the bacteria that live in our digestive system. According to an article in the New York Times by Michael Pollan, the goal is to gather information on the types and amounts of bacteria in the human gut. Scientists want to describe what a normal healthy microbe and human relationship should look like inside our digestive system. While the research is still in the very early stages, scientists have learned the following: The strongest and healthiest microbe systems are those with a lot of variety. The guts of Americans have much less variety than the guts of other populations. Diets that include a lot of processed foods support less variation in bacteria. Studying the makeup of our individual bacteria communities will help scientists get a better idea of which bacteria help human bodies. We used to think that bacteria in our bodies were invaders. This new research suggests that bacteria are part of the protective army that keeps us healthy. In fact, our bodies have a hard time recovering from medicines like antibiotics because they disrupt the balance of helpful bacteria. It seems clear from the early evidence that living with bacteria helps us resist invasion from things that make us sick. Scientists have also learned that microbes might help our guts do things like process vitamins and important nutrients. Some microbes may help us deal with stress, or adapt to changes. Furthermore, there may come a time—in your lifetime—when illness is treated not with antibiotics, but with extra-special microbes that help us defend our bodies from illness. All of this new information should make us think twice about things like antibacterial soap, which gets into our water supply. While many bacteria are very dangerous, we should perhaps be careful not to eliminate the good with the bad. While we figure out how to do that, feel free to let your dog lick your face. Rover's microbes may just be saving your life one day.
How is “A Brief Study of Guts” organized? Cause and effect Chronological order Fact by fact Problem-solution
@me10000 @catbug218
yeah ikr!!! its a lot to read
but i need help
i think it may be fact by fact
sorry if i'm wrong
i think its fact by fact
oh sorry thx guys :)
Based on "A Brief Study of Guts," which best summarizes the goal of new research into bacteria and microbes? To collect a wide variety of microbes in all mammals including humans To find ways to increase our intake of helpful microbes To find evidence to decrease the use of antibacterial soap To understand how microbes populate the human body and what benefit they provide
whtcha think?
partbb
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