• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Paleo Leap
  • Recipes
    • Beef and Red Meat
    • Chicken and Poultry
    • Pork
    • Fish and Seafood
    • Eggs
    • Soups
    • Salads
    • Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
    • Sauces, Dips & Vinaigrettes
    • Drinks
    • Sweets and Snacks
    • Cooking Tips
  • Learn
  • Your Starting Point
    • Topic Index
    • Paleo 101
    • Paleo Meal Plan
    • Paleo Food List
    • Transitioning to Paleo
    • Am I Doing it Right? - Checklist
    • Mini-Course for Beginners
  • Popular Topics
    • Recipes for Beginners
    • Breakfast Ideas
    • Homemade Condiments
    • Legumes
    • Wheat & Gluten
    • Dairy
    • Nightshades
  • More
    • Compilations
    • Foods
menu icon
go to homepage
  • Recipes
  • Chicken
  • Pork
  • Snacks
  • Salads
  • Learn Paleo
  • Paleo Cooking Tips
  • Paleo Diet Foods
  • Paleo Recipe Compilations
  • Keto Diet Recipes
  • Paleo Beef and Red Meat Recipes
  • Paleo Drink Recipes
  • Paleo Egg Recipes
  • Paleo Fish and Seafood Recipes
  • Paleo Sauces and Dips
  • Paleo Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
  • Paleo Soup Recipes
  • Paleo Tips & Tricks
  • Paleo Topic Index
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
  • search icon
    Homepage link
    • Recipes
    • Chicken
    • Pork
    • Snacks
    • Salads
    • Learn Paleo
    • Paleo Cooking Tips
    • Paleo Diet Foods
    • Paleo Recipe Compilations
    • Keto Diet Recipes
    • Paleo Beef and Red Meat Recipes
    • Paleo Drink Recipes
    • Paleo Egg Recipes
    • Paleo Fish and Seafood Recipes
    • Paleo Sauces and Dips
    • Paleo Sides, Veggies and Appetizers
    • Paleo Soup Recipes
    • Paleo Tips & Tricks
    • Paleo Topic Index
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • YouTube
  • ร—
    Home ยป Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Heart Health Starts in the Gut

    Last Modified: Feb 16, 2023 by Paleo Leaper ยท This post may contain affiliate links ยท Leave a Comment

    Sharing is caring!

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Reddit
    Heart Health

    Hereโ€™s a group of people you probably havenโ€™t thought about much: Greek immigrants living in Australia.

    Compared to people born in Australia, immigrants from Greece have 2-3 times the rate of obesity, diabetes, high cholesterol, hypertension, smoking, and a sedentary lifestyle. By all accounts, they should be dropping like flies. But their risk of cardiovascular mortality is 35% lower than the typical Australian personโ€™s. Why?

    This study looked at some potential answers. One possibility is their habit of taking a siesta in the middle of the day โ€“ sleep is powerful, and the Greek immigrants might just be getting more sleep. They also spend regular time outside, which could be netting them some extra Vitamin D.

    Or the answer might lie in their gut bacteria. The study noted that many of the Greek immigrants kept eating a lot of their traditional, vegetable-based dishes. A lot of them had their own vegetable gardens, especially after they retired. That makes for a diet much higher in anti-inflammatory polyphenols and fiber, both of which help maintain a healthy population of gut bacteria.

    And itโ€™s not actually crazy to think that better gut health might improve heart health. Hereโ€™s a look at the growing pile of evidence that heart health starts in the gut.

    Gut Health Affects Markers of Cardiovascular Health

    Numbers like blood pressure and total cholesterol are really proxy measures of cardiovascular health, but theyโ€™re still useful. Hereโ€™s a look at how gut health can affect them.

    Blood Pressure

    Humans with high blood pressure have lower bacterial diversity in the gut. They also have a different ratio between two important families of bacteria.

    This review explains several different ways that bacteria in the gut can affect blood pressure. As they ferment carbohydrates, some of the beneficial bacteria in the gut release peptides that reduce blood pressure. Short-chain fatty acids produced as a byproduct of fermentation can also lower blood pressure. Gut bacteria can also increase the absorption of important nutrients for regulating blood pressure, like calcium.

    Other research has suggested that probiotics are helpful for lowering blood pressure: improving gut health improves cardiovascular health.

    TMAO Metabolism

    Remember that paper from a year or so back, where red meat supposedly caused heart disease by increasing levels of TMAO in the blood?

    Everyone was very quick to point out the obvious rebuttal: fish also increases TMAO levels, but fish isnโ€™t associated with heart disease, so it doesnโ€™t make sense to blame the TMAO. But thereโ€™s also another problem with the idea that red meat causes heart disease by increasing TMAO: how much TMAO you produce in response to any given food depends on your gut bacteria.

    This review went over some interesting evidence that red meat can only increase TMAO levels if your gut is set up to make it happen. To take one dramatic example, this study compared two different groups of mice with different gut bacteria, and identified a clear distinction between high-TMAO producers and low-TMAO producers. Then they took the gut bacteria from high-TMAO producing mice, and transplanted them into a mice with no gut bacteria of their own. The recipient mice immediately started producing more TMAO. This shows that the gut bacteria are a critical link between red meat and TMAO production.

    Granted that there are a few questions about this line of research (e.g. thereโ€™s some evidence that TMAO is different in mice and in humans), but if thereโ€™s anything to it, itโ€™s likely a diet + gut biome issue, not a pure diet issue.

    Cholesterol Metabolism

    There are two big schools of Paleo thought on cholesterol: either itโ€™s totally insignificant and unimportant, or it is significant, but only as a โ€œred flagโ€ for other problems (so the cholesterol itself isnโ€™t the real problem; itโ€™s just the messenger).

    If youโ€™re in the first group, then any arguments about cholesterol probably mean very little to you. But if youโ€™re in the second group, you might be interested in this meta-analysis showing that probiotic supplements reliably reduce LDL cholesterol levels in patients with both high and normal cholesterol. In fact, thereโ€™s a specific blend just for that. If weโ€™re taking cholesterol, and especially LDL cholesterol, as a sign of cardiovascular risk, thatโ€™s good news.

    There are a couple different proposed mechanisms for this. For example, gut bacteria control the breakdown of bile acids in the gut. The more bile acids you break down, the more raw materials you need to replace them. Those raw materials come from breaking down cholesterol. So if you have a lot of species of bacteria that break down bile acids, youโ€™ll also end up breaking down a lot of cholesterol to replace those bile acids.

    Direct Cardiovascular Effects on the Heart and Blood Vessels

    Thereโ€™s also evidence that poor gut health directly causes injury to the cardiovascular system, and that improving gut health can improve cardiovascular health.

    Effects on Blood Vessels

    Gut health can directly affect the health of your blood vessels. Inflammation in the gut is very bad news: patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Crohnโ€™s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis) are at a higher risk for plaque formation and cardiovascular events. This study suggests that the connection is inflammation: the inflammatory/immune response in IBD injures blood vessels and starts off the process of heart disease.

    Other research suggests that off-kilter gut hormones can also damage the blood vessels, particularly in diabetes.

    Damage to the blood vessels, technically called endothelial dysfunction is an important early stage in cardiovascular disease, and it seems to be caused at least partly by gut problems.

    Effects on Heart Tissue

    Thereโ€™s also evidence that probiotics, which improve gut health, have a directly positive

    paleo yogurt
    The probiotic bacteria in yogurt may have benefits for your heart.

    effect on the heart. For example, this study describes how bacteria in the Lactobacillus family (those are the ones in yogurt and other fermented dairy foods) may produce a protein with a direct protective effect on the heart. And in this study, a probiotic protected rats against heart attacks and reduced the susceptibility of their heart tissue to injury through a complicated mechanism that actually had to do with the hormone leptin.

    What about recovery after a heart attack? This study found that giving rats a probiotic after a simulated heart attack slowed the progression of heart failure and helped maintain cardiac function.

    Unfortunately, the kind of long-term human studies that would really prove the theory havenโ€™t yet been done. Hopefully theyโ€™ll start showing up as the gut-heart connection gets more attention!

    What Helps?

    The Paleo world is full of general advice for overall good gut health โ€“ you can start here, if youโ€™re interested. But what do we know about modifying gut health for cardiovascular health specifically?

    The recommendation with the best evidence base is simply to eat lots of fiber-rich fruits

    Fiber-rich vegetables aren't restricted to vegans!

    and vegetables. This study looked at ways to modify the gut environment for the best cardiovascular health. It started off by praising vegetarian and vegan diets, but ended up unintentionally praising Paleo-style diets. Basically, the โ€œmagic ingredientโ€ in vegetarian diets was fiber-rich fruits and vegetables, which supply a lot of food for the gut bacteria. But vegetarians donโ€™t have any monopoly on eating fruits and vegetables, and lots of โ€œroughageโ€ has always been part of the Paleo recommendation for people who can tolerate it.

    Some of the studies above also recommended specific brands of probiotics. Paleo Leap has no financial interest in any of these and none of this is sponsored. Itโ€™s just FYI

    • Cardioviva, for reducing cholesterol. (Hereโ€™s a study on it). Available in drugstores.
    • Good Belly, for (in rats) improving recovery after a heart attack. (From this study). Available in grocery stores and health-food stores.
    • (If you tolerate dairy) Yogurt and other fermented diary. One study above found that bacteria in fermented dairy products specifically may be helpful, and full-fat dairy products may also be heart-healthy in different ways.

    Summing it Up

    Itโ€™s becoming increasingly clear that the gut has an important role to play in heart health. Inflammation in the gut and problems with the bacteria that live there can be dangerous to the cardiovascular system, but a healthy population of gut bacteria with low levels of inflammation can help maintain good heart health.

    Fiber and some probiotics may be particularly good for improving cardiovascular health via gut health.

    More Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    • closeup of a white bowl filled with Garlic & Roasted Onion Salsa
      Garlic & Roasted Onion Salsa
    • plate filled with blackened tilapia and sliced lemon
      Blackened Tilapia
    • Crab Stuffed Salmon served on a cutting board
      Crab Stuffed Salmon
    • 17 paleo bars & bites to snack on featured
      17 Paleo Bars & Bites To Snack On

    Sharing is caring!

    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Reddit

    Filed Under: Learn About Paleo & Keto Diets

    Reader Interactions

    Leave a Reply Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    Recipe Rating




    Primary Sidebar

    paleo leap square logo

    Hi, I'm Rick! Paleo Leap is the oldest and biggest resource online, covering everything about the paleo diet. We have over 1500 recipes categorized and plenty of meal plans for you to try.

    More about me โ†’

    Popular

    • Bacon-Wrapped Salmon Featured
      Bacon-Wrapped Salmon Recipe
    • Almond Milk Custard
      Almond Milk Custard Recipe
    • Flourless Banana Pancakes Featured
      Flourless Banana Pancakes Recipe
    • Turban Squash Soup Featured
      Turban Squash Soup Recipe

    Recent Recipes:

    • closeup of a glass of Almond banana cinnamon smoothie on a wood table
      Almond Banana Cinnamon Smoothie
    • glass of Peach and chocolate green smoothie on a wood table with peaches in the background
      Peach and Chocolate Green Smoothie
    • closeup of two glasses of cinnamon and Coconut vanilla milkshake
      Coconut Vanilla Milkshake
    • Pumpkin smoothie in a glass on a wood table with cinnamon sticks in the background
      Pumpkin Smoothie

    Footer

    โ†‘ back to top

    About

    • Privacy Policy
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Policy

    Newsletter

    • Sign Up! for emails and updates

    Contact

    • Contact

    As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

    For your information only. The statements on this website are merely opinions. Paleo Leap does not provide medical or nutritional advice, treatment, or diagnosis. Read the full disclaimer.

    Copyright ยฉ 2023 Paleo Leap