Leaky Gut Leads to an up to 30-fold Risk of Autoimmunity: Study
A recent study I coauthored in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences found a damaged intestinal barrier, or leaky gut, can lead to 30-fold increased odds of developing autoimmunity.
Leaky gut allows undigested food, microorganisms, toxins, and other pathogens in the gut to escape into the bloodstream. This can trigger systemic inflammation and promote autoimmunity.The intestinal walls consist of epithelial cells, which absorb nutrients from food while preventing harmful compounds from passing into the bloodstream. Connecting the epithelial cells are occludin tight junction molecules, which prevent potential pathogens from passing into the bloodstream. Occludin is regulated by zonulin, a protein that tells occludin when to open or close the junctions.
Occludin and Zonulin
When gut damage occurs (I’ll discuss factors that cause damage later in this article), occludin and zonulin get caught up in this tissue damage. The immune system produces antibodies against them to remove the dead and damaged cells. As such, we can identify intestinal permeability through lab testing by screening for elevated levels of zonulin and occludin.Our study investigated whether these markers of intestinal permeability relate to markers of autoimmune reactions.
- Occludin antibodies.
- Zonulin antibodies.
- 24 tissue antibodies indicative of various forms of autoimmunity.
Leaky Gut Increases the Risk of Neurological Autoimmunity
We also found a correlation between zonulin and occludin antibodies and neurological autoimmunity. The brain has a barrier that serves a function similar to the gut barrier—to allow necessary compounds in and out while protecting the brain from pathogens. The blood-brain barrier is also comprised of zonulin and occludin, which function as they do in the gut. Research suggests a breakdown of the blood-brain barrier plays a role in neuroinflammatory disorders, brain degeneration, and brain autoimmunity. For instance, past studies have shown a correlation between advanced intestinal permeability and multiple sclerosis. Our data supports previous research, showing a correlation between leaky gut and brain autoimmunity.Leaky Gut and Bone and Joint Autoimmunity
Leaky gut is also shown to promote autoimmunity against bone and joint tissue. Recent studies suggest intestinal permeability can lead to the circulation of bacteria that promote inflammation in the bones and joints.Leaky Gut and Autoimmunity Against the Thyroid, Liver, Pancreas, Glands, and Gut
Our study also supports past research showing links between leaky gut markers and Type 1 diabetes, autoimmune thyroid disease, adrenal autoimmunity (Addison’s disease), ovarian/testicular autoimmunity, primary sclerosing cholangitis, autoimmune hepatitis, gastric autoimmunity, and chronic inflammatory bowel diseases.The 3 Stages of Autoimmunity
Having autoimmune antibodies does not necessarily mean you have an autoimmune disease or even symptoms. Clinically, I have found autoimmunity moves through three stages:Things That Cause Leaky Gut
Leaky gut doesn’t appear out of nowhere. Through reviewing the research and clinical practice, I have found multiple factors contributing to leaky gut. They include:- Gluten sensitivity.
- Sensitivity to other foods (dairy, egg, soy, lectins, etc.).
- Gut infections—bacterial, parasitic, or fungal.
- Hormonal deficiencies or imbalances.
- Past brain injury—brain development or degeneration issues.
- Blood sugar instability—chronically high or low blood sugar.
- Low blood pressure.
- Gut autoimmunity.
- Chronic stress.
- Chronic sleep deprivation.
- Corticosteroids, antibiotics, NSAIDs, and other drugs.
- Alcohol consumption.
- Glutathione deficiency.
- Vitamin D deficiency.
- Dysbiosis (imbalance of bad bacteria).
I hope by now you realize how serious leaky gut is. It is not a passing health fad but a formidable condition that could shape the rest of your life. By ignoring the signals from your body to manage your leaky gut, you risk triggering or exacerbating an autoimmune condition.
Reposted from: https://www.theepochtimes.com/health/our-new-study-shows-that-a-leaky-gut-leads-to-an-up-to-30-fold-risk-of-autoimmunity-5546678
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