Blood Pressure Lowered by Probiotics
There's been an ongoing debate in medical circles about whether salt causes high blood pressure. The only answer, they say, is to curb salt intake.
STORY AT-A-GLANCE
Researchers found that in subjects who consumed probiotics for a week before starting a high-sodium diet, both their blood pressure and levels of the beneficial gut bacteria Lactobacillus remained within normal limits
Taking probiotics for a few days is not enough; people who consumed probiotics for less than two months didn’t show the positive impact on their blood pressure readings
Studies show lowered blood pressure due to intake of probiotics comes through a number of different mechanisms after establishing a steady regimen, one of the most important being its ability to reduce insulin resistance
Raw, grass fed yogurt, sauerkraut, kimchi and other fermented vegetables are excellent sources of probiotics, but a quality probiotic supplement can also be used to enhance your intake
Editor's Note: This article is a reprint. It was originally published November 29, 2017.
There are plenty of medical practitioners who will repeat that eating "too much salt" will increase your likelihood of developing high blood pressure. There's a lot of information on that from a growing number of scientists, and it's a salty debate. In fact, Dr. Sean C. Lucan of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine refuted the premise behind then-New York City health czar, Dr. Thomas Farley's "war on salt" campaign as far back as 2010, calling it "misguided" and asserting:1
"We do not know that reducing mean population sodium intake would decrease the risk of cardiovascular disease or save lives … For some high-risk heart patients, some studies show, a low-salt diet 'actually leads to worse cardiovascular disease and early death.'"
So if the biggest culprit in high blood pressure isn't eating too much salt, what can be done to lower your blood pressure? One solution resides with your gut bacteria, as regularly consuming probiotics could help relieve your symptoms.
In a study2 published in the journal Hypertension, scientists reviewed data from nine studies, all scrutinizing the associations between probiotics and blood pressure. All combined, 543 adults with either normal or high blood pressure levels participated. The researchers concluded:3
"People who consumed probiotics had an average reduction in systolic blood pressure (the top number in a reading) of about 3.6 millimeters of mercury (mmHg) and an average reduction in diastolic blood pressure (the bottom number) of about 2.4 mmHg, compared to those who did not consume probiotics.
Probiotics' benefits seemed greatest among people with elevated blood pressure (higher than 130/85), and probiotics with multiple types of bacteria lowered blood pressure more than those with a single type of bacteria."
Regular Probiotic Intake Is Key
The featured study,4 also noted that the word "regularly" in regard to probiotic intake is key; those who consumed probiotics for less than two months didn't show any positive impact on their blood pressure readings. Lead author Jing Sun of Griffith University in Australia noted that even from the relatively small collection of studies he and his colleagues reviewed, regular consumption can make or break the success of probiotics for easing hypertension.
It may not only help decrease your high blood pressure, but eating a diet rich in fermented foods may also help maintain healthy levels. Raw, grass fed yogurt and other cultured dairy foods such as cheese and kefir, a fermented milk beverage, are examples.
Apparently, scientists at large believe more proof is needed, as the studies showed only an association between probiotic intake and decreased blood pressure readings, rather than actual "cause and effect," and there were variables, such as the amount of probiotics consumed and other foods that may also have been beneficial, that denoted uneven results.
Still, Dr. Merle Myerson of the Center for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention of Mount Sinai Roosevelt and St. Luke's in New York City conceded that "despite these limitations, the results are useful in suggesting where further research should be directed."
Reduced Insulin Resistance — The Key to a Healthy Heart
Dr. Bruce Rutkin, a cardiologist at North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset, New York, contends that probiotics may influence your blood pressure for the better through a number of different mechanisms after establishing a steady diet of them.5 One of the most important is their ability to reduce insulin resistance, which is well-established as a key player in diabetes.
And that, Rutkin agrees, may be the most crucial key in the accompanying role of cardiovascular risk in regard to a person's blood pressure readings. Diabetic Journals explains:6
"Insulin resistance … recognized as a strong predictor of disease in adults, has become the leading element of the metabolic syndrome and renewed as a focus of research. The condition exists when insulin levels are higher than expected relative to the level of glucose. Thus, insulin resistance is by definition tethered to hyperinsulinemia."
The presence or absence of insulin sensitivity is important for heart health because as your insulin levels rise, it causes your blood pressure to increase. High blood pressure is one of the side effects of insulin resistance that drives atherosclerosis by placing stress on your arteries.
Study — Good Gut Bacteria Can 'Stop' Blood Pressure From Rising
An exceptionally in-depth review on the subject of how probiotics can influence blood pressure was undertaken in view of the clinical indications that consuming too much salt "doubles" your risk of heart failure, and that even eating a little can increase your chances of developing heart disease or having a heart-related incident.
Scientists from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts, joined researchers from several institutions in Germany to assess previous findings on the effects a high-salt diet can have on beneficial gut bacteria.
Their findings were published in the journal Nature.7 First author Nicola Wilck of the Max-Delbruck Center for Molecular Medicine in Berlin worked with colleague Dominik Muller, and Ralf Linker of Friedrich-Alexander University in Erlangen, Germany, jointly led the investigation. As Medical News Today reveals, the researchers found that adding high salt intakes created the same changes in humans as it did in mice:8
"A moderate high-salt challenge in a pilot study in humans reduced intestinal survival of Lactobacillus spp., increased TH17 cells and increased blood pressure. Our results connect high salt intake to the gut — immune axis and highlight the gut microbiome as a potential therapeutic target to counteract salt-sensitive conditions."
The upshot was that researchers found that in subjects who consumed probiotics for a week before starting a high-sodium diet, both their blood pressure and levels of beneficial Lactobacillus bacteria remained within normal limits. Study co-author Eric Alm, director of MIT's Center for Microbiome Informatics and Therapeutics, observed:9
"We're learning that the immune system exerts a lot of control on the body, above and beyond what we generally think of as immunity. The mechanisms by which it exerts that control are still being unraveled … If you can find that smoking gun and uncover the complete molecular details of what's going on, you may make it more likely that people adhere to a healthy diet."
Alm concluded that at least for his part, there may be some merit in developing probiotics targeted toward "fixing" some of the effects of a bad diet, adding that people shouldn't use it as a cure-all — "Eat fast food and then pop a probiotic, and it will be canceled out."10
Probiotics — How They Can Optimize Your Health
Here are some sobering statistics — one-third of Americans are said to have high blood pressure,11 and tens of thousands of Americans die every year as a result.12 But that's not all. Hypertension often leads to heart disease and stroke, which are themselves some of the most prevalent causes of death. However, in today's medically charged economy, the go-to treatment (to conventional medicine) is hypertension drugs.
On the contrary, however, the easiest solution for getting rid of high blood pressure is to reduce insulin resistance. The fact is, insulin resistance is a notorious cause of high blood pressure, with the secondary problem of an elevated risk for cardiovascular disease. That's where probiotics step in. Austin Perlmutter, M.D., an internal medicine physician, referenced increasing microbiome research and the fact that probiotic supplementation can positively impact high blood pressure.
He noted other positive effects such as increased brain health and skin improvement, along with significant decreases in diastolic and systolic blood pressure measurements, adding, "As could be expected, larger changes were seen in those who started with high blood pressure than those who were healthy to begin with."13
Positive results from studies are ramping up in favor of increasing your probiotic intake to lower your blood pressure, but the fact is, it's a win-win. There are innumerable reasons why stepping up your intake would benefit your health in myriad ways.
Benefits of Probiotics
The Hypertension study revealed that the greatest gains from using probiotics to decrease blood pressure appeared among those with the highest blood pressure readings at the start of the study, as well as among those who consumed multiple different strains.14 Besides carefully selected fruits and vegetables to naturally lower your blood pressure, some of the best sources of probiotics you can eat include:
Sauerkraut and other fermented vegetables
Pickles
Kefir
Nourishing your microbiome with probiotics is just one of the drug-free ways to lower your blood pressure, but it's one that can revolutionize your health by improving every system in your body, starting with your gut.
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Low-grade inflammation is the cornerstone of many chronic diseases. This type of inflammation increases with age, being common in elderly people, and is known to be a risk factor for cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Higher plasma levels of proinflammatory mediators, such as TNFα, IL1, and IL6, are frequently found in these cardiovascular conditions. Inflammation is often related to increased intestinal permeability, with elevated intestinal translocation of proinflammatory mediators of bacterial origin, such as LPS liposaccharides. A higher cumulative incidence of CVD was previously observed with higher serum levels of LPS-binding protein. LPS and other components of the bacterial cell membrane are recognized by several receptors on endothelial cells. LPS binding directly induces adhesion molecules, such as ICAM-1 and P-selectin on endothelial cells, which are important for interactions with leukocytes.
Probiotics have been shown to have a positive impact on cardiovascular health. An imbalance in the presence of Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes has been linked to the progression of CVD due to its impact on bile acid and cholesterol metabolism. Probiotics mainly help reduce plasma levels of low-density lipoproteins and attenuate pro-inflammatory markers. These beneficial microorganisms help reduce cholesterol levels and produce short-chain essential fatty acids. The impact of lipid-regulating probiotic strains on human health is quite significant.
The aforementioned data highlight the potential role of the gut microbiota in controlling intestinal permeability and endotoxemia and, therefore, the development of chronic low-grade inflammation and the risk of CVD. These findings explain why there is growing interest in developing intervention strategies targeting the microbiota to achieve downregulation of low-grade inflammation as a way to prevent CVD. Therefore, foods and ingredients, such as probiotics and prebiotics, represent promising tools for dietary management of CVD risk. In particular, dysbiosis is directly associated with many CVD risk factors in the host, such as diabetes. Previous research has shown a strong correlation between dysbiosis and the development of CVD. Probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics are considered important regulators of microbiota imbalances, as they increase the colonization of beneficial bacteria and therefore alter the gut microbiota
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