A study has concluded that junk food kills bacteria that protect against obesity. Strong link between good bacteria, diet and overall health discovered after researchers lived on McDonald’s meals for 10 days straight. Eating junk food kills stomach bacteria which protect against obesity, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, inflammatory bowel conditions and autism, fresh studies have found. The human gut contains around 3,500 difference microbial species, which together make up some three pounds in weight. Scientists now believe a diet based on a limited range of highly processed foods, rather than those found in a balanced, healthy diet, can wipe out the number of stomach flora by more than a third.
The discovery could explain why some people put on weight while others dont, despite eating roughly similar amounts of fat, sugar, protein and carbohydrates. The finding emerged from studies conducted by Tim Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology at Kings College London. He enlisted the help of his 23-year genetics student son Tom, who agreed to spend 10 days on a fast-food-only diet of McDonalds hamburgers, chips, chicken nuggets and Coca Cola.
Tom said: Before I started my fathers fast food diet there were about 3,500 bacterial species in my gut, dominated by a type called firmicutes. Once on the diet I rapidly lost 1,300 species and my gut was dominated by a group called bacteriodetes. The implication is that the McDonalds diet killed 1,300 of my gut species. Almost two thirds of adult Britons are overweight.
However Professor Spectors findings appear to support existing research which indicates the problem is far more complex than simply eating too much. Stomach flora also play a key role in warding off potentially harmful microbes, regulating the metabolism. They produce digestive enzymes alongside vitamins A and K, which are needed to aid the absorption into the body of important minerals such as calcium and iron. Bacterial imbalances have been linked increased chances of developing conditions such as colitis and inflammatory bowel disease, while there is evidence that autism may be linked to lower gut bacterial activity.
Yet the precise make up of our microbial populations may vary from country to country, while there are even suggestions that obesity may be contagious. Tests conducted by the University of Colorado in the US found that transferring bacteria from an obese human to a mouse led to the animal gaining weight, while lean nice placed in cages with obese ones also became fat.
Professor Spector said: Microbes get a bad press, but only a few of the millions of species are harmful, and many are crucial to our health. What is emerging is that changes in our gut microbe community, or microbiome, are likely to be responsible for much of our obesity epidemic, and consequences like diabetes, cancer and heart disease.
Professor Spector oversees a UK registry of 12,000 twins who are monitored over the course of their lives for the effects of a variety of genetic and environmental factors.
The findings are the result of early work carried out by the British Gut Project, of which he is a founding member. Excluding fat and sugar are less important to a healthy diet than making sure the food one eats is as diverse and natural as possible, Professor Spector said. His advice chimes with studies suggesting that Belgian Beer, garlic, coffee, leeks and celery are ideal foods for promoting healthy gut flora.
Professor Spector said: Fifteen thousand years ago our ancestors regularly ingested around 150 ingredients in a week. Most people nowadays consume fewer than 20 separate food types and many, if not most, are artificially refined. Most processed food products come, depressingly, from just four ingredients: corn, soy, wheat or meat. A spokesman for McDonald’s said: “We have a wide range of foods available in our restaurants and McDonald’s can be enjoyed as part of a healthy balanced diet. “We have also reformulated our ingredients to reduce the amount of salt, fat and sugar and removed trans fats entirely from our menu”.
THE DIET MYTH is a ground-breaking book by Tim Spector, Professor of Genetic Epidemiology at Kings College, London, drawing on his pioneering research into microbes, genetics and diet. At a time when an increasing proportion of the worlds population is suffering from obesity and its related health issues, Tim Spector offers an important and fascinating perspective on this global epidemic. He explains that because of the way in which our attitudes to food have changed over the last few decades, we are no longer exposed to the very microbes that have always been an invisible but essential part of our physiology.
In THE DIET MYTH Tim Spector will offer a compelling account of our physiological relationship with food, and dispel many of the most prevalent myths and pseudo-science surrounding faddish diets. With this new knowledge we can begin to understand the complex relationship our bodies have with food and start to reverse this health crisis.
Tim Spector explains why the dogma about calories is wrong, why some diets succeed in the short term and why all ultimately fail in the long term. The one common factor to a healthy diet, healthy gut and a healthy body is diversity. If we are to combat the epidemic of obesity and health problems we need a fundamental shift in how we view food, diets and the hidden microbial world inside our bodies.