Some of the bacteria growing in your colon may help to protect you from getting infections throughout your body. Researchers cultured stool samples from more than 10,000 people, including more than 600 people hospitalized for serious infections. The stool was specifically checked for 16 types of bacteria that produce Short Chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs). They found that over six years, those who had 10 percent more colon bacteria that produce SCFAs were 15-25 percent less likely to be hospitalized for serious infections
What Are SCFA-Producing Bacteria?
All plants contain soluble fiber that cannot be absorbed in the upper intestines of humans, so when you eat any plant, the soluble fiber passes unabsorbed all the way to your colon, the last five feet of your intestinal tract. Your colon contains more than 100 trillion bacteria, and some of these bacteria are beneficial while others are harmful. The harmful bacteria are not satisfied with the food you eat, so they look for food elsewhere. They try to puncture your colon cells, which turns on your immune system to cause harmful inflammation. On the other hand, the healthful bacteria are happy with what you eat and do not try to puncture your colon cells. These are the bacteria that convert soluble fiber from plants to healthful SCFAs. These SCFAs are absorbed through the colon into the bloodstream where they have already been shown to help lower:
• high cholesterol
• high blood sugar
• high insulin levels
• high blood pressure
Now we learn that they may even help to protect you from developing infections.
The foods that you eat determine whether you grow healthful or harmful bacteria because healthful colon bacteria eat the same foods that you do
A plant-based diet helps to keep you healthy. People who eat the most and widest amount of vegetables have the lowest rate of heart attacks and heart disease
The good bacteria produce large amounts of SCFAs that feed more good bacteria and help them to multiply. The SCFAs also:
• reduce inflammation
• help to lower high levels of blood sugar and cholesterol
• possibly reduce hunger
• cause your intestinal linings to produce the beneficial mucus that lines your colon to help prevent the bad bacteria from growing there.
The more vegetables and fruits you eat, the higher the stool levels of SCFAs
How SCFAs Help to Prevent Disease
SCFAs help to determine whether you:
• become obese
• have high cholesterol
• are at increased risk for suffering a heart attack
• are at increased risk for becoming diabetic
Heart Disease: Many studies show that high-fiber diets help to prevent and treat heart disease by reducing inflammation
Diabetes: After three months on a high-fiber diet, the bacteria in the colon of diabetics changed to be dominated by the 15 known strains of bacteria that convert soluble fiber into SCFAs that lower high blood sugar and cholesterol levels
Colon Cancer: A high plant diet is associated with a marked reduction in colon cancer
Obesity: SCFAs promote weight loss in animals
SCFAs from Plants, not Supplements
If SCFAs have so many benefits, why not just take SCFA supplements? Nobody has shown that SCFA supplements are an effective substitute for eating plants that contain lots of soluble fiber. SCFAs are readily absorbed throughout your entire intestinal tract, so SCFAs in pills will be absorbed in your upper intestinal tract and never reach your colon
My Recommendations
Eating lots of fiber-containing plant foods can increase colon SCFA-producing bacteria that may help to reduce susceptibilty for serious infections. The studies cited in this report suggest that whatever else you choose to do with your diet, you should eat a large amount and a wide variety of vegetables. I believe that everyone should eat lots of plants – vegetables, fruits, beans, whole grains, nuts and any other edible plant parts. Among their many benefits, plants help to prevent disease and prolong lives by increasing colonic bacterial production of SCFAs that reduce inflammation.