- Digestive disorder are a growing problem
globally. What contributes to weakening
digestive health? Understanding the Digestive process. What is Migrating Motor Complex and
its effect on Gut? Importantly How to restore balance in the Gut.
From personal experience say the mind
works well when the gut is ok. Over time, my face has come to indicate the
state of my gut - Editor
If
one understands the real cause of digestive disorders, one is able to not only
manage them well but also prevent many other diseased conditions.
Health is a matter of food being digested and assimilated well, and then all waste material eliminated thoroughly. It’s that simple. If this is maintained the body is capable of protecting itself against disease.
However, digestive disorders and poor gut
health are the most common problems of modern civilization. By a rough
estimate, one in three people globally has some form of ongoing digestive
issue.
In some datasets, this rises to more than 40% of the global population, especially when including all gut–brain interaction disorders. These include irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), chronic constipation, dyspepsia (indigestion), bloating, gas-related disorders, etc. These numbers could be higher since many people self-manage and never seek medical care. Further, definitions vary across cultures on ‘normal’ vs. constipation, and symptoms like bloating, irregularity. Acidity is often normalized or ignored.
“The problem of constipation is the most outstanding contribution of civilisation to the chronic misery that life is to the civilised man,” is a statement made in the middle of the last century by Acharya K Lakshmana Sarma, the Father of
Nature Cure in India. The condition has only worsened in the present
century.
What is gut health?
This article in Parashospitals.com says, “Gut health refers to how well your digestive system functions. It includes the stomach, intestines, and especially the balance of bacteria living inside your gut, known as the gut microbiome.” It regulates bowl movement, affects state of mind and energy levels.
Rising
global burden!
Digestive dysfunction is now considered
one of the most common chronic health issues globally, often comparable to or exceeding
many other disease categories. Besides direct data, there is indirect evidence in
the form of a rapidly growing global market for digestive remedies.
Several studies seek to understand the ‘global burden’ of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and related digestive health problems. It is unfortunate and somewhat ironic that something as basic as digestion, which can be managed by the individual, has turned into a ‘global burden’, simply because we do not take responsibility for our own digestion management!
What
is needed is to understand how the digestive process works, where the imbalance
lies, and how to correct it. Solve it; not suppress it through remedies!
What
contributes to weakening digestive health?
1.
Nervous stimulation
Digestion is now well understood to be closely regulated by the nervous system through the gut–brain axis. It works best when the body is in a “rest-and-digest” state, governed by the parasympathetic nervous system.
When the body is frequently pushed into
stress or stimulation, the sympathetic system becomes dominant. In such a
state, irregular gastric acid secretion, erratic gut motility, and increased
intestinal sensitivity are common. This, in turn, aggravates conditions such as
irritable bowel syndrome and gastroesophageal reflux disease.
2.
Chemical stimulation of the gut
Many foods common in modern diets are
physiologically stimulating. Such as strong spices (capsaicin from Chilli
pepper), caffeine, alcohol, highly acidic condiments like vinegar, and
ultra-processed foods with additives.
3.
Sensitization of the gut
Modern gastroenterology recognizes a
phenomenon called visceral hypersensitivity, commonly seen in IBS (Irritable
bowel syndrome). In this state, intestinal nerves become more reactive, and
normal sensations are perceived as pain or discomfort. Foods that previously
caused no issue may trigger symptoms.
Excessive and regular intake of highly
pungent, sour, and stimulating foods can contribute to this heightened
sensitivity over time.
4. Other sources of ‘stimulation’
Digestive overstimulation does not come
only from food. Modern living adds multiple layers like constant psychological
stress, irregular meal timing, late-night eating, excessive caffeine, highly
concentrated flavours and processed foods. Together they can push the gut into
a continuous state of reactivity.
5.
Other major contributors
Overstimulation is not the only cause of
digestive problems.
Low dietary fibre, ultra-processed foods,
antibiotic overuse, microbiome disruption, and sedentary lifestyles all contribute.
Thus, chronic overstimulation of the gut,
both dietary and psychological, usually contributes to digestive disorders,
particularly in conditions involving gut sensitivity.
Know
your issues
Functional dyspepsia is indicated by chronic, recurrent indigestion and upper abdominal discomfort (pain, burning, bloating, or early fullness) that persists without any identifiable organic cause. It is said to be a disorder of the "gut-brain" interaction where the stomach does not function properly, even though not damaged structurally.
Irritable bowel syndrome is a functional disorder of the lower digestive tract and a disorder of gut–brain interaction. Investigations typically show no visible structural damage. However, symptoms include abdominal pain linked with bowel movements, alternating constipation and/or diarrhoea, bloating, and gas. At this stage, the gut is reactive and irregular, but not structurally damaged.
If corrections are not made at this stage, functional digestive problems may progress into inflammatory or structural disorders such as infectious colitis (due to bacteria or parasites), ulcerative colitis, and Crohn’s disease. These involve actual inflammation or damage to the intestinal tissue.
To put it briefly, in dyspepsia the stomach
is unable to handle food well, in IBS the intestines are structurally normal
but function irregularly, while colitis indicates an inflamed or damaged colon.
So where does this leave us with chronic constipation? This is less of a disease
and more a functional slowdown of a daily biological rhythm. It is a signal of
imbalance rather than necessarily a pathological condition: a daily elimination
rhythm that has lost its ease, timing, or completeness. If left unattended for
long, it may not just turn into a chronic condition, but also bring along other
diseased conditions.
This problem tends to aggravate with age, as
three factors decline together: movement (motility), moisture (hydration), and
responsiveness (nerve signalling). This combination naturally predisposes to
constipation.
It is not accurate to say that constipation is inevitable in old age. It is common, yes—but largely because lifestyle over time becomes less aligned with physiology, and small imbalances accumulate over decades.
Understanding
the digestive system
We have an alimentary canal and a digestive
system. The alimentary canal, or digestive tract, is the continuous muscular
tube through which food passes, is digested, and waste is expelled. It includes:
Mouth → pharynx → oesophagus → stomach → small intestine → large intestine → anus.
The digestive system is a broader term
that includes the alimentary canal along with the accessory organs such as the
salivary glands, liver, gall bladder, pancreas, teeth, and tongue.
Digestion is a complex process involving both
mechanical (chewing, churning, peristalsis) and chemical (enzymes, acids, bile)
actions. All the participating organs work in coordination, maintaining a
finely tuned balance for nourishment and growth.
This automated system continues to function flawlessly despite abuses—UP TO A POINT. Beyond that, sustained imbalance can lead to breakdown.
However, even a basic understanding of how
the body functions, and the relationship it shares with the food that sustains
it, can prevent years of discomfort and ill health.
Knowing
the digestive process
Digestion begins even before food enters
the mouth. Visual and olfactory cues prepare the digestive system. Actual
digestion starts in the mouth, where carbohydrates begin to break down.
Proteins and fats are primarily digested
in the stomach. The partially digested food then moves into the small
intestine, which is the main site for digestion and absorption. Here, nutrients
are broken down into glucose, amino acids, and fatty acids, and absorbed into
the bloodstream and lymph.
After absorption, the remaining material
passes into the large intestine, where water, minerals, and certain vitamins
(including vitamin K and some B-complex vitamins produced by gut bacteria) are
absorbed.
It is an automated system that works 24 by
7. Then what goes wrong? Nothing can go wrong if a healthy microbiome is
maintained. The system can cater for minor deviations here and there.
What
is a healthy microbiome?
A healthy microbiome is a stable ecosystem
characterised by diversity, balance, and resilience. It is shaped by diet, environment, daily rhythm, and stress.
In certain conditions, microbial diversity
declines, beneficial bacteria reduce, and production of important metabolites
like short-chain fatty acids decreases. Over time, the microbiome becomes less
stable and less resilient.
Factors contributing to this include
low-fibre diets, ultra-processed foods, medications such as antibiotics and
painkillers, excessive sanitization with limited microbial exposure, chronic
stress, irregular and late-night eating patterns, sedentary lifestyle, and
early-life influences such as mode of birth (C-section vs vaginal), feeding
practices (breastfeeding vs formula), and antibiotic exposure.
The
MMC factor
The digestive system is self-regulating,
but only up to a point. It is important to understand the balance between
digestive rhythm and load.
It is not only what we eat, but also how
frequently and irregularly we eat. Imbalance, over time, disturbs the Migrating Motor Complex. MMC is a wave-like cleansing movement in the gut that occurs during fasting, typically 3–4 hours after a meal, clearing residual food, bacteria, and debris.
Here is a typical diet regime that weakens MMC: Tea + biscuit → breakfast → snack → lunch → tea → dinner → late-night eating → milk or coffee before bed.
When eating is frequent and continuous,
this mechanism is suppressed. As a result, residue is not cleared efficiently
and begins to accumulate. When new food arrives before the previous meal is
processed, fermentation increases, leading to heaviness and incomplete
digestion.
Over time, this contributes
to bloating, gas, reduced absorption, sluggish bowel movement, and eventually
chronic constipation.
Prebiotics, probiotics, digestive enzymes, and various remedies are used, but they rarely address the root issue. Overuse may even reduce the body’s own efficiency over time.
The real solution lies in restoring
dietary balance and digestive rhythm. In a well-functioning system, the
microbiome is self-regulating, enzymes are adequately produced, and whole foods
naturally support gut health.
The
solution: Mindfulness
The gut is not merely a tube; it is a
living ecosystem involving digestive organs, nervous system signalling, and the
microbiome consisting of trillions of microbes.
Only if this system is balanced, does food
get digested properly, nutrients are absorbed, waste is eliminated efficiently
and we can be healthy.
Balance is restored when eating aligns with natural signals and rhythms—eat when truly hungry, allow adequate gaps between meals, avoiding constant snacking, early and lighter dinner, and maintaining regular elimination patterns.
A regular weekly
coconut-water-fresh juices-fruit fast and fortnightly water fast highly
recommended.
Let us not forget, all diseases have their
roots in the gut!
Anuradha Vashisht is a natural health educationist who has been promoting preventive health care through her Health Nectar initiative for over two decades. She guides individuals to restore and enhance their well-being naturally—through the adoption of holistic health concepts, mindful nutrition, and lifestyle transformation.
Anuradha trained under Acharya Seshadri
Swaminathan, the foremost and most devoted disciple of Acharya Lakshmana Sarma,
revered as the Father of Nature Cure in India. Her id reach.healthnectar@gmail.com
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Also
read
1. Good foods to help
your digestion
2. Gut health why it
matters, symptoms and solutions – good read.
3. Strategies for a
Healthy Gut