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I’m hitting the paywall so I can’t read the article, but the headline reminds me of something Andrew Huberman talked about in one of his recent podcasts-

https://youtu.be/rW9QKc-iFoY

It’s a small segment at the beginning, about a recent study showing how fermented foods help decrease inflammation possibly through increased gut bacteria diversity.

Beer, pepperoni, and mozzarella are all fermented foods. Pizza and beer sounds like a fine diet :)
lol. maybe 'fermented vegetables' would have been a better title. although the common definition for 'fermented foods' don't include the ones you mentioned... but you already knew that haha
Fermented milk can also be healthy!
Tricky bit is finding the real deal. Don’t have much faith in the large chains distribute anything that

> teeming with live microorganisms,

Of course they don’t because those would have a very short shelf life. Fortunately those things are pretty easy to make at home
Kimchi has a pretty long shelf life. The stuff sold as fresh kimchi has a several month “use by” date, and I’m sure the “old” kimchi is about a year old. When I made it, I never refrigerated it. I’m sure sauerkraut is the same.
You can relatively easily ferment food. Kimchi for example is trivial to do. Many milk-based fermented foods can be bought as ready-to-combine kits too.
I suffer from severe stomach pain due to inflammation. Lots of tums.

Started drinking 2 kombucha a day a couple months ago.

Stomach problems are almost entirely gone now.

Only one data point. But it has helped.

Speaking from personal experience: after a brutal round of antibiotics to kill a pathogen in my gut, I still had terrible issues — I believe from inflammation feeding into itself. A few weeks of pure CBD + probiotics has brought immense relief; I have since been able to drop the CBD; I will continue with a round of different probiotics to maximize the variety of gut microbes. I am finally, after several years of gut hell, optimistic that I’m going to get healthy.

Edit: the CBD had the immediate effect of reducing peristalsis. Also made me fog-brained and sleepy, but I feel that was an acceptable side-effect for the limited time I’d be on it.

What was the dose of CBD you found effective?
I went for complete overkill and chowed down 30mg/capsule for a week, then melted them into oil & made brownies so that I could halve and quarter the dose. Did that for another couple of weeks. If anything, it seemed too effective at slowing peristalsis and the pain had largely gone away, so I stopped using the CBD but kept on with the probiotic pills (but taking them at a double dose because I figure it doubles the chance that they’ll make it past my stomach.) I’ll finish by taking a different probiotic pill with a different spectrum of bacteria et al. That plus my from-scratch diet should seed & support a replenished gut biota.