Exercise changes gut microbes and eases inflammation via endocannabinoids
Exercise appears to alter the gut microbes, which increases endocannabinoids, in turn reducing inflammation and potentially helping treat conditions including arthritis.
Little is known as to how exercise reduces inflammation. So a group from the University of Nottingham recruited 78 people with arthritis into their research: 38 participants carried out 15 minutes of muscle strengthening exercises every day for six weeks; the other 40 participants did nothing.
At the end of the study, participants who did the exercise intervention had:
- Reduced their pain levels;
- More microbes in their gut of the kind that produce anti-inflammatory substances;
- Lower levels of cytokines;
- Higher levels of endocannabinoids.