
Like humans, we are all the guards of a wide menagerie. All the surfaces of our bodies, inside and outside, is associated with microorganisms. We have microbiomes on our skin, within us aha And other orifments and – especially – in our intestines.
In recent years, we are used to thinking of these internal inhabitants, as it is essential for our health. Our guts are said that there are “pleasant” bacteria, giving other microorganisms that make us feel comfortable. That is, in part, but the new research on the role of gut microbioma would be a deep replant of this relationship.
In this emerging view, our gut microbes are not our friends, but the enemy at the doors. Being a mutual beneficial, our relationship with them is like an attractive war – the war we end lose. However there are ways to delay inevitable.
A gut microbiome a 100 trillion microorganism community – Bacteria, archaea, fungi and Viruses – Living within our bowel tract, abundant in the colon. It is fixed early and stays with us throughout our lives, although it is in constant flow. “It’s a very complex and very dynamic community, depends on what we eat, who interact with,” he says Dario Valenzano At the Leibniz Institute of Aging – Fritz Lipmann Institute (FLI) Jena, Germany.
Aging microbiome
It also changes in age. For most life, composition …