Drinking kefir may prompt brain-gut communication to lower blood pressure
26 april 2018--Previous research has shown that an imbalance in the gut's colony of bacteria (microbiota) may cause high blood pressure in some people. Similarly, probiotics—live bacteria supplements that are beneficial to the digestive system—have been found to lower blood pressure, but the mechanisms by which this occurs are unclear.
A research team from Auburn University in Alabama, in collaboration with the University of Vila Velha in Brazil, studied three groups of rats to determine how kefir reduces high blood pressure (hypertension):
- One group had hypertension and was treated with kefir ("treated").
- One group had hypertension and was not treated ("untreated").
- One group had normal blood pressure and was not treated ("control").
"Our data suggests that kefir antihypertensive-associated mechanisms involve gut microbiota-brain axis communication during hypertension," the researchers wrote.
More information: Mirian Silva-Cutini, of Auburn University, will present "Probiotic kefir antihypertensive effects in spontaneously hypertensive rats involve central and peripheral mechanisms" on Wednesday, April 25, in the Sails Pavilion of the San Diego Convention Center.
Provided by Experimental Biology 2018
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