The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Healthy gut = healthy skin?

Designer probiotics claim to be secret to complexion perfection.

- By Courtney Rubin New York Times

Three years ago, Danielle Fleming, a real estate agent in Hoboken, New Jersey, started suffering persistent acne around her jawline. She had “ugly, weird pimples,” she said. After switching detergents, hair spray and anything else she could think of, she went to a dermatolog­ist to ask about a prescripti­on for Accutane or maybe a laser treatment. What she left with was a diet.

It took Fleming, 43, two years to adhere to the gut-changing diet suggested by Dr. Whitney Bowe, a dermatolog­ist in New York. The diet, set forth in Bowe’s book, “The Beauty of Dirty Skin,” is essentiall­y low-glycemic index foods along with bacteria-rich fermented ones. It is meant to alter the trillions-strong population of gastrointe­stinal microorgan­isms, quelling inflammati­on, including skin-related outbreaks.

But Fleming, a confessed sugar addict, was reluctant to give up her artificial­ly sweete nedyogurt and her bulk candy store habit, and she hoped that following bits of the diet inconsiste­ntly would be enough. Finally she gave in.

“I h aven’t had a breakout since,” Fleming said. “And people ask me all the time what I’m doing to my skin.”

Fixingthe gut microbiome has been linked to a wide range of health benefits (it may, according to som e studies, help lowe r incidence of cancer, strokes and obesity), and much of skin care, the beauty category mos taffect edby wellness trends, is now focused on the gut as the secret to complexion perfection.

So comes a wave of designer probiotic pills and powders — stylishly packaged, with names like Glow and Inner Beauty — that suggest they can do a lot of the heavy lifting of that gut fixing for you.

Consider: The Beauty Chef, an Australian company founded by a former beauty editor, offers seven probiotic-laced products that occasional­ly sell out on Neta-Porter and Goop. This year, makeup gu ru B obbi Bro wn introduced no-water-needed lemonflavo­red probiotic “pixie sticks” in her Evolution 18 wellness line.

Sonya Dak ar, a facialist, sells a probiotic called simply Acidophilu­s Flora. Rose-Marie Swift, the makeup artist who is known for creat ing glowy skin on Kate Bosworth, Gisele Bündchen and Miranda Kerr , re centl yint roduced probiotic supplement­s under her RMS beauty brand, inspired partly by her relative lack of suc- cess getting models to eat foods with live cultures.

“You’d get these beautiful models, and they’d have really bad skin,” said Swift, who, because of a l ong-ago illness, has been preaching probiotics and safer cosmetics for years before either was trendy. “I’d tell them to eat fermented foods, but nobody does.”

Unfortunat­ely, cleaning up your gut (and your ski n)isn’tass imple as swallowing a probiotic. Not yet, anyway.

Can I just swallow asupp lement?

Th ere are small studies associatin­g certain strains of bacteria with acne reduction, skin hydration and elasticity. For example, one called lactobacil­lus casei subsp. casei 327 (or L. K-1 for short) seems to improve the skin bar-

Skin con tinuedon D2

rier and reduce flakiness, according to a 2017 Japanese study. Another strain, lactobacil­lus rhamnosus SP1, has been linked to a reduction in adult acne, reported in a 2016 study.

So why can’t you simply swallow the strains in pill form and watch them automatica­lly take effect?

First, it’s not even wellestabl­ished that a strong stomach, bacteriall­y speaking, is the secret to clear skin. We don’t know precisely what the mechanisti­c connection­s are between the gut microbiome and the skin, said Justin Sonnenburg, an associate professor of microbiolo­gy and immunology at Stanford University School of Medicine, who studies gut microbiota.

It is certainly true that what happens in the gut isn’t confined to the gut, he said — that it’s part of the integrated system that is you. Your gastrointe­stinal microorgan­isms affect metabolism, immune response, stress. Change something in the gut microbiome — diet is one of the most powerful levers for that — and the effects ripple outward, potentiall­y to the skin.

One problem with the current probiotics is that everyone’s gut microbiome is different. Add to that the variations in each person’s immune system and skin microbiome (the distinct community of critters that reside in the skin), and what it means is that whether a given probiotic will flourish — and then have an effect — is a bit of a lottery.

A small 2016 study published in the journal Cell Host & Microbe found that when a probiotic was administer­ed orally, it persisted only in about a third of participan­ts. (The study didn’t monitor health effects, only whether the bacteria took up residence.)

The triumph of the unsexy diet

Even if science eventually finds a strong causal connection between the microbiome and glowing skin, probiotics aren’t likely to be a one-stop solution.

“Supplement­ation by itself isn’t going to be enough,” Bowe said. “If you just take a probiotic supplement, it’s going to pass through if it doesn’t have the right milieu to take hold and survive.” She recommends probiotics but only in conjunctio­n with eating right.

Sonnenburg thinks it’s more likely that skin solutions will eventually go the precision health route. You’d be classified as one of, say, 12 types, with each type being given different probiotics, different dosages and different mixtures combined with a different diet to enforce a certain resident bacteria community compositio­n.

“What I would probably bet on is that it would be a mixture of probiotic and diet, or even just diet alone, that will be a much more powerful lever for impacting skin,” he said. “But I’ve been wrong before.”

The best way so far to improve your skin from within seems to be the unsexy old one of lasting diet change, mostly of the sort already linked with other health benefits: whole foods, limited saturated fat, minimal refined sugar. And it is here that the current crop of probiotic supplement­s may be most effective, as a kind of gateway drug for diet overhaul.

 ?? ANDREA D’AQUINO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A wave of designer probiotic pills and powders — stylishly packaged, with names like Glow and Inner Beauty — is based on the idea that perfect skin may be linked to your tummy.
ANDREA D’AQUINO/THE NEW YORK TIMES A wave of designer probiotic pills and powders — stylishly packaged, with names like Glow and Inner Beauty — is based on the idea that perfect skin may be linked to your tummy.

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