When I was growing up, I had a first cousin who was morbidly obese, long before the efforts of the rest of the country to catch up with her. Her failure, and it was considered a failure, to lose weight was seen as evidence of a moral failing, a lack of willpower, only slightly less pejorative than the sin of gluttony in earlier times. There was some vague talk that she might have some hormonal imbalance, but it was clear that all around her considered her problem to be predominantly one of willpower.
Both alternative and scientific medicine have taken a recent interest in gastro-intestinal (GI) flora, or “gut bacteria.” The alternative medicine folks have favored “probiotic” supplements and yogurts fortified with bacteria. The probiotic movement began with Nobel laureate Elie Metchnikoff, known as the “father of probiotics,” who believed that longevity of rural Bulgarians and Georgians could be attributed to their consumption of fermented milk products.
Consideration of the impact of GI flora on diarrhea is not really new–a half century ago I can recall being given lacto-bacillus pills to counter the gastric distress resulting from penicillin. It is the potential impact of bacteria on obesity that is notable in the current focus. Recently National Public Radio (NPR) interviewed Jeffrey Gordon, a microbiologist and director of the Center of Genome Science and Systems Biology at the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
While I hope you will either listen to the embedded audio clip (about 12 minutes) or read the interview transcript, the short version is that there the research shows a recursive feedback loop between how the bacteria impact our appetite and how what we eat impacts the bacteria that are in our intestines. By eating the right or “lean” foods, we encourage the bacteria that help us maintain our weights at a healthy level. Now, there has been some experimentation with fecal transplants, having a similar aim, but that does not seem to be for everyone–particularly those of us who would be grossed out by the very idea. Eventually, we will probably have probiotics, which, combined with proper diet (they need to be fed or cultivated in our gut), can be delivered to our intestines in pill form, or at least a suppository rather than a fecal transplant.
Over time my cousin became estranged from nearly everyone in the family and died a few years ago, not having been seen by any family members in decades. Waxing philosophically, I cannot help but wonder how different my cousin’s life might have been had she been born a half-century or better a century later. And, I wonder how different my father’s life might have been had he survived his first heart attack and lived to see statin drugs.
It seems that much of our survival depends upon living just long enough for technology to address a mortal weakness in our genome. Nonetheless, it is encouraging to note that promising approaches to obesity may make it seem like nothing more interesting than a historical healthcare statistical blip rather than the crisis it appears to be as we live with it and address it.
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