Este artículo resume la información más importante sobre: Salud intestinal y peso: Cómo el microbioma afecta la composición corporal.
What Is the Gut Microbiome?
The gut microbiome is the community of trillions of bacteria, fungi, viruses, and other microorganisms living in your digestive tract — primarily the large intestine. You carry approximately 38 trillion microbial cells, roughly equal to the number of human cells in your body. These organisms are not passive passengers; they actively influence digestion, immune function, inflammation, and increasingly, body weight.
How the Microbiome Affects Weight
Research has identified several mechanisms linking gut bacteria to body composition:
- Energy harvest: Certain bacterial strains extract more calories from food than others. In animal studies, transplanting gut bacteria from obese mice to germ-free mice causes the recipients to gain fat — even without eating more.
- Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs): Bacteria ferment dietary fiber into SCFAs (butyrate, acetate, propionate), which regulate appetite hormones (GLP-1, PYY) and improve insulin sensitivity.
- Inflammation: Dysbiosis (imbalanced microbiome) increases intestinal permeability ("leaky gut"), allowing bacterial toxins into the bloodstream. This drives systemic inflammation, which impairs insulin signaling and promotes fat storage.
- Bile acid metabolism: Gut bacteria modify bile acids, affecting fat absorption and energy metabolism.
What Damages the Microbiome
| Factor | Effect |
|---|---|
| Antibiotics | Kills beneficial bacteria — diversity can take months to recover |
| Ultra-processed food | Feeds pro-inflammatory bacteria; lacks fiber for beneficial strains |
| Chronic stress | Alters microbiome composition; increases intestinal permeability |
| Poor sleep | Disrupts circadian rhythm of gut bacteria |
| Artificial sweeteners | Some (saccharin, sucralose) alter microbiome and glucose tolerance |
How to Improve Your Gut Microbiome
• Eat 30+ different plant foods per week (diversity drives microbial diversity)
• Aim for 25–38g of dietary fiber daily
• Include fermented foods: yogurt, kefir, kimchi, sauerkraut, kombucha
• Limit ultra-processed food and added sugars
• Exercise regularly — aerobic exercise increases beneficial bacterial diversity
• Prioritize 7–9 hours of sleep
Probiotics and Prebiotics
Probiotics (live bacteria) in supplement form have mixed evidence for weight loss — effects are strain-specific, modest, and often temporary. Food-based probiotics (fermented foods) show more consistent benefits. Prebiotics (fiber that feeds beneficial bacteria) have stronger evidence — increasing dietary fiber reliably promotes beneficial bacterial growth.