What is the relationship between your gut microbiota and your glucose?
The gut microbiota consists of the trillions of bacteria that live in your gut and act as a second metabolic brain. Glucose is the sugar that circulates in your blood and that your body uses for energy. When these bacteria are out of balance, your body loses the ability to maintain stable glucose levels, creating those uncontrollable cravings and energy spikes.
When your gut microbiota (gut bacteria) is disrupted (dysbiosis), the carbohydrates you eat aren't processed properly. Instead of keeping your blood sugar stable and being converted into sustained energy, they're stored directly as fat, especially in the abdomen. That's why you can eat very little and still feel like you're not losing weight.
An imbalanced gut microbiota allows toxins to enter your bloodstream, creating constant inflammation that your body can't shut down. This silent inflammation interferes with your glucose control, contributing to insulin resistance: your body resists burning fat and you gain weight, no matter how hard you try.
Your gut microbiota produces hormones that control whether you feel hungry or full and how your body handles glucose. When it's disrupted, these hormones malfunction: you never feel satisfied, you always crave sugar, and your body thinks it needs to store fat "just in case."
Balancing your gut microbiota not only improves your digestion, but also reprograms your metabolism to keep your glucose stable , process carbohydrates as energy instead of fat , and naturally control your cravings and sugar levels.