Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Smartphone app tracks how gut bacteria affect health

Darpan News Desk IANS, 25 Jul, 2014 10:03 AM
    A smartphone app used by two volunteers for one year to track their daily life has thrown interesting results about the composition of gut bacteria and its close relationship with health.
     
    These participants used smartphone apps to collect information every day for a year in the study by scientists from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Harvard University.
     
    They logged their daily activity, including diet, exercise, bowel movements and mood and submit regular stool and saliva samples.
     
    The samples were analysed in detail to see what had the greatest effect on the composition of the microbiota.
     
    The results showed that the participants had a "default" microbiota which were unaffected by sleep levels, exercise and mood.
     
    What did have a significant effect on the microbiota were two life events - one subject moved abroad while the other had a significant bout of food poisoning which caused most pre-existing gut bacterial species to decline.
     
    "Life events such as visiting another country or contracting a disease cause a significant shift in the make-up of the gut microbiota - the community of bacteria living in the digestive system," researchers explained.
     
    The authors think the method could be rolled out to studies of human-bacteria relationships with many more participants.
     
    "This has given us a lot of new ideas for follow up studies and analyses of gut microbial ecology as well as infectious diseases in humans," professor Lawrence David from Duke University said.
     
    The study published in the open access journal Genome Biology.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes

    Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes
    Do you regularly drink to excess? Even before conception, a son's vulnerability for alcohol use disorders could be shaped by a father who chronically drinks to excess, a significant study indicates.

    Father's drinking habits may impact son's genes

    App that helps tackle stress in parents

    App that helps tackle stress in parents
    If you are a parent and have to deal with kids who give you the jitters, this App is designed for you.

    App that helps tackle stress in parents

    Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does

    Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does
    Creativity depends on greater brain integration and transcendental meditation could help achieve this, a new study has found.  

    Does practice make you perfect? Meditation does

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study
    Planning to start a family? Stop using marijuana now as cannabis use may put your fertility at risk, especially if you are young.

    Stop marijuana use to boost fertility: Study

    Divorce may end in obese kids!

    Divorce may end in obese kids!
    Children, whose parents are divorced or not married but living together, are at a higher risk of obesity, a study has found.

    Divorce may end in obese kids!

    Bees create mental maps to reach home

    Bees create mental maps to reach home
    We have long wondered at the complex navigation abilities of the bees who use the sun as a compass. But bees do memorise a mental map too, like humans, despite their much smaller brain size, new research reveals adding a whole new dimension to complex bee-navigation abilities that have long fascinated scientists.

    Bees create mental maps to reach home