Timing is Everything: ISB Study Finds Link Between Bowel Movement Frequency and Overall Health

Everybody poops, but not every day. An ISB-led research team examined the clinical, lifestyle, and multi-omic data of more than 1,400 healthy adults. How often people poop, they found, can have a large influence on one’s physiology and health.

Timing is Everything: ISB Study Finds Link Between Bowel Movement Frequency and Overall Health
Timing is Everything: ISB Study Finds Link Between Bowel Movement Frequency and Overall Health
screenshot for video on Beyond the Scale: How Multiomics and Biological BMI Can Help Achieve Optimal Health

Beyond the Scale: How Multiomics and Biological BMI Can Help Achieve Optimal Health

ISB researchers have constructed a biological BMI that provides a more accurate representation of metabolic health and is more varied, informative and actionable than the long-used classical BMI. ISB Senior Research Scientist Dr. Noa Rappaport discussed biological BMI in a Research Roundtable presentation. 

Beyond the Scale: How Multiomics and Biological BMI Can Help Achieve Optimal Health
Beyond the Scale: How Multiomics and Biological BMI Can Help Achieve Optimal Health
Wilmanski-Gibbons

Gut Microbiome Composition Predictive of Patient Response to Statins

New ISB research shows that different patient responses to statins can be explained by the variation in the human microbiome. The findings were published in the journal Med, and suggest that microbiome monitoring could be used to help optimize personalized statin treatments.

Gut Microbiome Composition Predictive of Patient Response to Statins
Gut Microbiome Composition Predictive of Patient Response to Statins

ISB Research on the Aging Microbiome Featured in The New York Times

ISB’s research into the aging microbiome was featured in a story published by Anahad O’Connor for The New York Times titled “A Changing Gut Microbiome May Predict How Well You Age.” The research featured was published in Nature Metabolism by Drs. Tomasz Wilmanksi, Noa Rappaport, Sean Gibbons and Nathan Price.

ISB Research on the Aging Microbiome Featured in The New York Times
ISB Research on the Aging Microbiome Featured in The New York Times
The Aging Microbiome

Gut Microbiome Implicated in Healthy Aging and Longevity

The gut microbiome is an integral component of the body, but its importance in the human aging process is unclear. ISB researchers and their collaborators have identified distinct signatures in the gut microbiome that are associated with either healthy or unhealthy aging trajectories, which in turn predict survival in a population of older individuals.

Gut Microbiome Implicated in Healthy Aging and Longevity
Gut Microbiome Implicated in Healthy Aging and Longevity
1 2