probiotic microflora
Noun: A community of beneficial, live microorganisms (primarily bacteria and yeasts) that naturally inhabit the digestive tract of healthy mammals. These microorganisms are often derived from or considered similar to those found in fermented plant-based foods and are essential for maintaining gut health and overall well-being.
The term is used in the fields of nutrition, medicine, and biology to refer to the collective population of health-promoting microbes in the gut. * Maintaining a balanced probiotic microflora is crucial for proper digestion. * Antibiotics can sometimes disrupt the natural probiotic microflora in the intestines. * Yogurt contains cultures that can help support your probiotic microflora.
- Gut-brain axis: Research explores how the influences mood and cognitive function through this biological communication network.
- Dysbiosis: This term refers to an imbalance or deficiency in the , often linked to various health issues.
- Probiotic (noun/adjective): A substance or product containing live microorganisms intended to confer a health benefit by contributing to the .
- Microbiota: A more general, often synonymous term for the entire community of microorganisms (including beneficial, neutral, and potentially harmful ones) in a given environment, such as the gut.
- Gut Flora: A common informal term for the microorganisms living in the digestive tract.
- Commensal Bacteria: Bacteria that live in a mutually beneficial relationship with their host, a category that includes much of the .
- Beneficial gut bacteria
- Intestinal flora (in a health context)
- Commensal microbiota
- Pathogenic bacteria
- Harmful microbiota
- To colonize the gut: Refers to the process where probiotic microorganisms establish themselves as part of the .
- Microbial balance: The state of having a stable and healthy in proportion to other microbes.
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a beneficial bacterium found in the intestinal tract of healthy mammals; often considered to be a plant
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