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    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Leaky Gut, Demystified

    Last Modified: Feb 7, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

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    Itโ€™s a phrase that sounds like total nonsense: leaky gut? Really? The human digestive tract is not a plumbing system that isnโ€™t up to code; how can your gut be leaking?

    The name โ€œleaky gutโ€ makes it sound a lot sillier than it is, though. It was probably intended to be more vivid or evocative, but it ends up sounding like nonsense. If you look for the same problem under the technical names โ€“ โ€œintestinal permeabilityโ€ or โ€œepithelial barrier dysfunctionโ€ โ€“ youโ€™ll find a whole bunch of actual peer-reviewed research describing what it is and why itโ€™s a serious problem.

    Intestinal permeability is a serious problem that can contribute to general gut dysfunction, inflammatory disease, and autoimmune disorders: hereโ€™s a quick run-down of where it comes from and what you can do about it.

    Leaky Gut: What Is It?

    Itโ€™s a little weird to think about, but everything in your gut is technically still outside your body. Human bodies are shaped a little like a donut, with a hole in the middle running from the mouth to the anus. The hole in the middle of the donut is the inside of your gut โ€“ technically, nothing in there is part of your body yet. The cells of the gut lining are like millions of tiny border control police: their job is to let the good guys (water, nutrients) in and keep the bad guys (bacteria, viruses, toxins, undigested foodโ€ฆ) out.

    To get a little more specific about it, proper gut barrier function depends onโ€ฆ

    • The physical lining of the gut: layers of mucus and border cells that actually form a physical barrier to penetration by anything you donโ€™t want inside your body. In the border control metaphor, this is like the actual line of checkpoints you see at the border (the physical barricades, fences, or other structures).
    • The โ€œfunctionalโ€ barrier: various chemical secretions, proteins, immune molecules, and other substances that donโ€™t form a physical barrier but still contribute to keeping the bad guys out while letting the good guys in. In our imaginary border control, these are the agents staffing the checkpoint.

    The gut flora communicate with these two aspects of the gut barrier โ€“ for example, they affect the rate of epithelial cell turnover, support a healthy mucus layer, and influence the behavior of antimicrobial proteins โ€“ but they arenโ€™t part of the barrier itself.

    The gut barrier is obviously part of the digestive system: it has to choose what nutrients to let into your body so you can use them for energy. Itโ€™s also part of the immune system (it keeps out any potential pathogens you swallow). But while itโ€™s attacking bad bacteria, it also has to leave your gut flora alone.

    This study reviews how the gut does all this: itโ€™s such a hard job that just keeping your gut functional takes about 40% of the energy you expend every day.

    โ€œLeaky gut,โ€ or abnormal intestinal permeability, is when that barrier doesnโ€™t work right. Sometimes this is because the cells lining the gut are damaged; sometimes itโ€™s because the places where theyโ€™re joined to each other (called โ€œtight junctionsโ€) are weakened. The result is that the gut lining lets in things it shouldnโ€™t be letting in โ€“ like undigested proteins or pathogens.

    How does the Gut Get Leaky?

    Unfortunately, leaky gut has all kinds of contributing factors; thereโ€™s no one trigger where if you just remove this one thing, your gut problems will all be solved. For most people, the problem is likely a variety of causes:

    • Stress, especially chronic stress, increases intestinal permeability. But acute stress will also do it โ€“ for example, serious burns can
    Gluten Paleo
    Up for a side of gut dysfunction with that bagel?

    cause leaky gut as well.

  • Any kind of systemic inflammation will also do it - say, if your diet is full of seed oils, or refined sugars, or other junk, if youโ€™re overexercising, if youโ€™re sleep deprived (especially sleep deprivation caused by alcoholism)...
  • Gluten exposure is a common trigger, because it releases a hormone called zonulin, which modulates tight junctions. This study fingers the two major triggers of zonulin release in the gut as bacterial infections of the small intestine and gluten (specifically gliadin) exposure.
  • Some medications (e.g. NSAIDs like ibuprofen) increase intestinal permeability.
  • Anything that messes with the gut flora (e.g. antibiotics) is at least a suspect, although the precise effect obviously depends on specifically how it throws the gut flora off their game.
  • Leaky Gut: Why does it Matter?

    So why should you care if your epithelial cells are letting a few undigested proteins through?

    Intestinal permeability is a contributing factor to a huge number of inflammatory diseases, including gastrointestinal problems (Celiac Disease, Ulcerative Colitis, Crohnโ€™s Disease, Inflammatory Bowel Disease, Irritable Bowel Syndromeโ€ฆ) and metabolic diseases (obesity, fatty liver disease, diabetes, and cardiovascular diseases). Increased intestinal permeability means inflammation, and inflammation is just generally bad news.

    Because the gut barrier is a crucial part of the immune system, dysfunction here can also cause immune problems down the line, up to and including autoimmune disorders. The most famous case study is Celiac Disease, but Celiac isnโ€™t the only one by far. As this study puts it: โ€œThere is growing evidence that increased intestinal permeability plays a pathogenic role in various autoimmune diseases including [Celiac Disease] and [Type 1 Diabetes]โ€ฆ besides genetic and environmental factors, loss of intestinal barrier function is necessary to develop autoimmunity.โ€

    The study goes on to explain that intestinal permeability is a trigger for autoimmune disease because when unwanted pathogens and proteins cross the gut barrier, your body mounts an immune attack against them. This immune reaction can trigger an autoimmune response in people who are already genetically susceptible.

    Leaky gut is also very closely tied up with gut flora dysfunction, and gut dysbiosis has been linked to problems from acne to depression to constipation to everything in between. Basically, if your gut isnโ€™t happy, you wonโ€™t be happy either.

    Keeping the Gut Barrier Healthy

    Nobody knows enough about the gut yet to give one โ€œprescriptionโ€ for a healthy gut, but a good start is avoiding all the things that cause leaky gut in the first place:

    • Avoid gut irritants, particularly gluten.
    • Avoid chronic stress and inflammation.
    • Get an adequate intake of important nutrients. This study highlights Vitamins A and D and prebiotic fibers for intestinal function specifically.
    • If youโ€™re going to do dairy, make it pastured: this study found that pastured dairy improved gut barrier function in rats compared to conventional dairy.
    • Keep your gut flora happy. In particular, some evidence suggests that probiotics might help for intestinal permeability (remember that the gut flora arenโ€™t technically part of the gut barrier, but they help modulate it)
    • Glutamine supplements have been shown helpful in mice, and thereโ€™s reason to think they might be beneficial for humans too. Or you could just eat more bone broth!

    Just eating Paleo (including the โ€œweird stuffโ€ like bone broth and probiotics!) will get you most of the way there from a dietary perspective.

    Summing it Up

    โ€œLeaky gutโ€ sounds like a silly name, but itโ€™s actually a serious problem and not something to brush off as pseudoscience. Letting nutrients in while keeping everything else out is a hard job โ€“ if your bodyโ€™s system for making it work gets thrown out of whack, it can set off serious inflammatory and autoimmune consequences down the line.

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