The authors base their viewpoint on tens of experimental studies carried out mostly on laboratory animals. These studies apparently show that the intestines of mice which suffer from obesity contain more bacteria types which efficiently convert indigestible food into manageable fatty acids. When researchers transplanted the gut flora of obese mice into mice without such gut flora, the fat percentage increased significantly in these so-called germ-free mice. It is suspected that the gut flora (known as gut microbiota) of these obese mice also affects hormones involved in fat storage.
Humans suffering from obesity also have such efficient gut bacteria, the authors surmise. They would therefore derive more energy from food and become fat easier. Various studies also point to this view, although the results are not always conclusive. Professor Willem de Vos, one of the authors of the publication, says: 'The study of gut bacteria in humans is rather complex. Every human being has a unique composition of microbiota, which makes research difficult. We want to use this review article as a first step into a territory which is abandoned by and large. Research into the relationship between microbiota and obesity in humans can only begin afterwards.'
Thursday, February 18, 2010
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