I’ve arrived at similar conclusions and it seems roughly inline with research on gut biomes. My own autoimmune condition began after a stressful period with a negative emotional aspect. I’d also been eating less “healthy diet too”, etc.
The first line is vit-d and pro-biotics, especially if you have heavy inflammation and microbiome issue or have taken antibiotics.
Alongside those would be eating a generally “higher quality diet” with a fair bit of variety. Reducing sugar and avoiding highly processed foods and preservatives helps significantly. Foods with less antibiotics help too, so items like free range eggs, organic milk can be helpful. Vegetables seem less affected by organic or non-organic.
Fermented foods are pretty important in providing a wide variety of microbes. I’ve noticed that lots of traditional spices like turmeric or black pepper are beneficial. I have a pet hypothesis that most “traditional diets” in a region would adjust to include useful spices and come to “taste good”. Almost every regional cuisine also used to have a staple fermented food. Nowadays fermented foods are generally replaced by vinegar substitutes nowadays (sauerkraut, pickles, Kim chi). Ketchup has roots as a fermented chutney like tomato sauce for example. Obviously kefir and such are different.
Going more keto or alternatively vegetarian doesn’t matter as much once your gut biome can shift. Though often going keto or vegetarian tends to get people to start eating better quality food. It also encourages a wider variety of foods which help prevent mono-cultures forming in the gut microbiome.
However good food isn’t a cure all, just a helper too keep the microbiome healthy. It can reduce chronic inflammation alongside vit-d.
The first line is vit-d and pro-biotics, especially if you have heavy inflammation and microbiome issue or have taken antibiotics.
Alongside those would be eating a generally “higher quality diet” with a fair bit of variety. Reducing sugar and avoiding highly processed foods and preservatives helps significantly. Foods with less antibiotics help too, so items like free range eggs, organic milk can be helpful. Vegetables seem less affected by organic or non-organic.
Fermented foods are pretty important in providing a wide variety of microbes. I’ve noticed that lots of traditional spices like turmeric or black pepper are beneficial. I have a pet hypothesis that most “traditional diets” in a region would adjust to include useful spices and come to “taste good”. Almost every regional cuisine also used to have a staple fermented food. Nowadays fermented foods are generally replaced by vinegar substitutes nowadays (sauerkraut, pickles, Kim chi). Ketchup has roots as a fermented chutney like tomato sauce for example. Obviously kefir and such are different.
Going more keto or alternatively vegetarian doesn’t matter as much once your gut biome can shift. Though often going keto or vegetarian tends to get people to start eating better quality food. It also encourages a wider variety of foods which help prevent mono-cultures forming in the gut microbiome.
However good food isn’t a cure all, just a helper too keep the microbiome healthy. It can reduce chronic inflammation alongside vit-d.