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Gut Inflammation & Migraine: Why Your Brain and Digestive Symptoms Mirror Each Other
Description
When your gut heats up and your brain starts to ache, it’s not random — it’s a message. A flare-up in your gut can echo upward, shifting your brain chemistry, amplifying inflammation, and lowering your migraine threshold.
In this episode of Migraine Heroes Podcast, host Diane Ducarme connects the dots between digestive distress and neurological pain — helping you understand why gut trouble so often becomes head trouble.
You’ll discover:
🔥 How gut inflammation changes the brain — from neuroinflammation to altered neurotransmitters
🔥 Why the stress–gut–brain loop keeps symptoms cycling — and how permeability, cortisol, and inflammation feed each other
🔥 How Eastern medicine explains a “hot” or “inflamed” gut — and why cooling, calming, and restoring flow can quiet the mind
🔥 Practical ways to soothe the gut so the brain can finally settle — using food, routines, and simple nervous-system resets
This episode blends neuroscience with holistic medicine to help you recognize when your gut is speaking — and how to respond before the pain reaches your brain.
🎧 New episodes every Monday and Wednesday
🔗 Discover our work on migraineheroes.com
References:
- Gut–Brain Axis & Neuroinflammation (The Journal of Headache and Pain, 2020): This study by Arzani et al., 2020 shows how gut permeability and inflammation heighten neurological sensitivity and increase migraine risk. Read more here.
- Altered Gut Microbiota in Migraine (Xu et al., Nature Scientific Reports, 2023): Xu and colleagues found that individuals with episodic and chronic migraine show distinct gut microbiota signatures, highlighting a gut–brain connection influencing inflammation, pain sensitivity, and migraine frequency. Read more here
- Unravelling the Gut–Brain Connection: A Systematic Review of Migraine and the Gut Microbiome (Kennedy et al., 2024): Kennedy and colleagues reviewed current research showing that gut microbiome imbalances can influence inflammation, nervous system regulation, and migraine severity, reinforcing the gut–brain axis as a key factor in migraine. Read more here.
- Migraine and the Gut Microbiome: Insights from Mendelian Randomization (Zhang et al., Frontiers in Neurology, 2024): Zhang and colleagues used Mendelian randomization to show genetic links between gut microbiome composition and migraine risk, suggesting that certain microbial patterns may play a causal role in migraine development. Read more here.
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