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Plants and the gut microbiome: Prebiotics and postbiotics

  • Simon Mills
    Simon Mills

    I am a Cambridge medical sciences graduate and have been a herbal practitioner in Exeter since 1977. In that time I have led the main professional and trade organizations for herbal medicine in the UK and served on Government and House of Lords committees. I have written standard textbooks used by herbal practitioners around the world, including with Professor Kerry Bone from Australia.

    I was involved in academic work for many years, co-founding the University of Exeter pioneering Centre for Complementary Health Studies in 1987 (where we built a complementary research and postgraduate teaching programme from scratch), then at Peninsula the first integrated health course at a UK medical school, and the first Masters degree in herbal medicine in the USA, at the Maryland University of Integrative Health.

    I am particularly fascinated by the insights we can distill from the millions of intelligent people who over many centuries needed plants to survive. Mostly I want to learn and share the old skills, to experience healing plants as characters, that can help us fend off ill health. My passion for offering people tools to look after themselves and their families has led me to work with the founders of the College of Medicine on pioneering national self care and social prescribing projects. I am now the College Self Care Lead and also Herbal Strategist at Pukka Herbs.

    Listen to our Herbcast podcast with Simon Mills as the host.

  • 41:35 reading time (ish)
  • Digestion & Nutrition
Plants and the gut microbiome Prebiotics and postbiotics

In this major review we will consider the astonishing implications of discoveries that each of us is a unique joint enterprise between our body and its resident microbes. No longer are our commensal bacteria and viruses seen as add-ons. Instead, we now know there is a dynamic relationship between our microbiota and the rest of us which really does determine who and how healthy we are.

Microbial communities inhabit all body surfaces and cavities. However, the microbiota in the gut are by far the most substantial and have the greatest impact on our lives and health.

We will reflect on how the therapeutic journey in supporting the gut microbiome has moved from probiotics, through prebiotics and now to consider the profoundly intriguing notion that plants could be ‘postbiotics’, reflecting the way food materials and their metabolites engage in ‘crosstalk’ between our microbiota and the rest of us.

We will see that plant constituents may indeed have the biggest dietary impact on the health of the gut microbiome, and that a leading contribution to our overall health may yet turn out to be their role in facilitating a healthy collaboration between us and our ‘inner garden’.

There are also implications for bioavailability and dosage. Plant constituents are most likely to be active in the gut when they are poorly absorbed, and even then, given the impact being expected, only a few will deliver benefits in less than dietary doses. We will look at the range of plant influences on the microbiome with these practicalities in mind.

Simon Mills

I am a Cambridge medical sciences graduate and have been a herbal practitioner in Exeter since 1977. In that time I have led the main professional and trade organizations for herbal medicine in the... Read more

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