Gut microbiota dysbiosis and osteoporosis: pathogenesis and novel intervention strategies.
Liu C, Yin X, Yuan X
Medicinal Plants
Fermented plant foods — kimchi, miso, sauerkraut — are among the richest sources of the probiotics this research identifies as capable of reshaping gut bacteria in ways that protect bone density.
Your gut is home to trillions of bacteria that do far more than digest food — they help regulate your bones too. When that bacterial community gets out of balance, it can trigger inflammation and disrupt the way your body builds and maintains bone, raising the risk of osteoporosis. This review found that restoring healthy gut bacteria through things like probiotics, fermented foods, and certain plant compounds could be a powerful new way to protect bone health.
Key Findings
Gut microbiota dysbiosis drives osteoporosis through at least five interconnected mechanisms: immune disruption, altered metabolites, impaired nutrient absorption, endocrine disruption, and inflammation from a leaky gut barrier.
Microbiota-targeted interventions — including probiotics, prebiotics, fecal microbiota transplantation, and natural bioactive plant compounds — show therapeutic promise for preventing and managing osteoporosis.
Traditional Chinese medicine and nanomaterials are emerging as novel delivery strategies for reshaping the gut microbiome to support bone remodeling homeostasis.
chevron_right Technical Summary
Researchers reviewed how imbalances in gut bacteria contribute to osteoporosis by disrupting immune function, nutrient absorption, and bone remodeling — and identified gut-targeting therapies like probiotics and plant-based compounds as promising new treatment directions.
Abstract Preview
Osteoporosis represents a major global public health challenge, with current pharmacological treatment often limited by substantial side effects. Recent research identifies the gut-bone axis as a k...
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