Table of contents
1. Try To Find Your Balance
2. Eat A Diverse Range Of Foods
3. Eat Colorful Fruit and Veg, and a Lot of Fiber
4. Snack on Some Fermented Foods
5. Take It Easy on Red Meat or Alcohol
6. Don’t Forget to Exercise
7. Get a Good Night’s Sleep
8. Limit Your Use of Antibiotics
9. Maybe Top It All Off With Probiotics and Prebiotics
10. Take Care of Your Gut Health to Take Care of Your Vaginal Health
Illustrated by Erin Rommel, Sabrina Bezerra & Ralitza Nikolova.
Research has long shown that gut health is crucial for your overall health, going far beyond the gut, stomach, and intestines. Did you know that a healthy gut can also promote a healthy vagina? The bacteria in your gut and in your vagina are in sync through the “gut-vagina-axis”. As with many other aspects of gynaecological health, the link between the gut and vaginal microbiomes is under-researched, underrated, and underappreciated.
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“It was probably Aristotle who said all health problems arise from your gut, and there's a certain amount of truth in that,” says Jeremy Nicholson, a professor of biological chemistry at Imperial College London specializing in gut health.
Nicholson explains that your gut health is based on your gut’s microbiome, the concoction of trillions of living bacteria hanging out in your gut and turning over about every two days. The more diverse the bugs are, the more thriving your gut health tends to be. Plus, those microbes are deemed “pharmacologically active” so they have an impact on the rest of the body too, like altering the production of hormones or deciding how you metabolize a drug.
“It's an incredibly complex, dynamic, partially malleable ecology… that's inside you,” says Nicholson. The bacteria living inside you are at the core of the complex interactions between diet, microbiome and overall health.
According to what your microbiome looks like, and which of those microbes are interacting more actively with the rest of your bodily systems — like your immune system, your nervous system — you may be more or less responsive to diets, drugs, lifestyle changes and so forth, says Nicholson.
So, for your gut health’s upkeep, there isn’t anything particularly radical you can do to get in stellar shape. It’s all about moderation, and diversity, and here’s a couple of tips to achieve that.
Try To Find Your Balance
Like most things in life, experts tend to believe that keeping a balanced and consistent lifestyle is at the core of keeping a healthy gut too.
“Consistency is key,” says Emil Hodzovic, MD, founder of Dr. Emil Nutrition. “Form healthy habits and daily routines to support a healthy gut. These could include getting out of the habit of snacking, especially late at night, and sleeping a full eight hours each night.”
So, try to have a balanced diet, a balanced work-life schedule, and a balanced sleep routine. All of these positive habits contribute to your body’s homeostasis — the technical term for biological balance — which in turn means your gut health will also be balanced.
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Eat A Diverse Range Of Foods
Diet is probably the most important element to keeping a healthy gut, and in turn a healthy vaginal microbiome, so we’ll be covering a couple of strategies you can introduce to keep your gut + vaginal axis on point.
What’s most important is diversifying your diet: research has shown that consuming a lot of different foods can lead to a diverse microbiome, which is generally thought to be a healthy microbiome. In fact, studies have also shown that as the Western diet gets slimmer over time — with high quantities of processed foods — so does the vast array of healthy bacteria in our guts. That’s why some researchers are adamant to collect as many samples of different microbiomes from around the world before some gut bugs disappear from our world completely.
Nicholson notes that there has been a lot of interest in copying the diet of the inhabitants of Okinawa, in Japan, because researchers realized their diversity in fruits and vegetables was showing contributions to their overall health, and many Okinawans were centenarians.
So, how does one diversify their diet?
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Eat Colorful Fruit and Veg, and a Lot of Fiber
Also try eating foods such as raw veggies, leafy greens, raw onions, leeks, asparagus and artichokes… and make sure to include some colorful fruits and veg in there too.