If you’re experiencing bloating, digestive distress – think diarrhea or constipation, food sensitivities or intolerances, fatigue, skin problems, or symptoms that seem to flare up for no apparent reason, you’re not imagining it. Many people who struggle with chronic symptoms have underlying gut inflammation and an imbalanced gut microbiome. Treating gut inflammation is an increasingly important focus in both research and clinical practice – it’s a huge passion of mine as a registered dietitian nutritionist.
The gut is not only responsible for digestion. It plays a central role in immune function, regulating inflammation, absorbing nutrients, and communicating with the brain via the gut-brain axis (or highway, as I call it). When the gut environment is disturbed, systemic symptoms can occur far beyond the digestive system.
Let’s break down what gut inflammation actually is, how the microbiome affects it, and what you can realistically do to support healing.
What is inflammatory bowel disease?
Gut inflammation refers to the activation of the immune system within the gastrointestinal tract – specifically think of the small and large intestines. This can occur in response to infection, food ingredients, stress, medications, or a disruption of the gut barrier (also known as “leaky gut”).
The microbiome, the trillions of bacteria and other microorganisms that live in your digestive system, plays an important role in regulating this process.
A balanced microbiome helps:
- Maintain the integrity of the gut lining
- Regulate immune responses
- They produce beneficial compounds such as short-chain fatty acids
- Compete with harmful microbes
- Support the metabolism of nutrients
Inflammation is not inherently bad or something to get rid of. it is part of the normal immune defense. Concern arises when inflammation becomes chronic, excessive, or poorly regulated.
How microbiome imbalance causes symptoms
When beneficial microbes decrease and less favorable organisms increase, a condition known as dysbiosis can be developed. This imbalance can alter gut permeability, immune signaling and metabolic processes.
Common contributing factors to dysbiosis/imbalance include:
- Repeated use of antibiotics (and no, antibiotics aren’t inherently “bad” – they’re just sometimes overused)
- Highly processed dietary patterns that are low in fiber
- Chronic psychological stress
- Bad sleep
- Gastrointestinal infections such as foodborne illness or viruses
- Certain medicines
- Low dietary diversity
This imbalance can contribute to symptoms such as:
- Bloating and gas
- Irregular bowel habits (urgency, gas, bloating, etc.)
- Abdominal discomfort
- Food reactivity or sensitivities
- Fatigue or brain fog
- Skin changes or rashes
- Joint pain
- Mood swings or irritability
Symptoms do not always correlate with severity. Even mild imbalances can significantly affect how you feel every day.
The gut-immune system connection
Seventy to eighty percent of the immune system is located in or around the gut. The intestinal lining acts as a selective barrier, allowing nutrients to pass through while keeping harmful substances out.
When this barrier is degraded or disrupted, immune activation can increase. This is sometimes described as increased “gut permeability” or leaky gut.
Potential downstream effects include:
- Increased inflammatory signaling
- Increased sensitivity to food
- Aggravation of autoimmune conditions
- Systemic symptoms outside the gut
Not everyone with inflammatory bowel disease develops these problems, but the connection is well established.
Because treating inflammatory bowel disease takes time
There is no single food, supplement or protocol that will repair the gut overnight. Treatment requires addressing multiple interacting factors and working with a personalization specialist. Many of my anti-inflammatory plans focus on increasing fiber, but that’s not the right move for every person – some people need low fiber, and if you’re not sure, it’s time to spread.
The microbiome is dynamic and responds to daily inputs such as diet, stress, sleep, movement and medications.
Substantial improvement often occurs gradually as the gut environment shifts toward stability over time. If you need support, be sure to grab my anti-inflammatory mini meal here for ideas and guidance.
What you can do to support healing
1. Increase dietary fiber and diversity
Beneficial microbes rely on fermentable fiber found in plant foods.
Useful strategies include:
- Eating a wide variety of fruits and vegetables
- Include legumes, nuts, seeds and whole grains as tolerated
- Gradually increase fiber if intake was low
- Focusing on consistency rather than perfection
Sudden large increases in fiber can make symptoms worse at first, so a gradual approach is often best.
Some of my favorite high fiber recipes
Vegetarian bean stew
Chia pudding with almond vanilla coconut
Pumpkin Dhal
Banana Ginger Oats
Simple Spicy Vegetarian Chili
2. Support the Gut Barrier
Adequate nutrition helps maintain the structure of the intestinal lining.
Key considerations:
- Adequate protein intake
- Adequate calories to avoid malnutrition
- Micronutrients such as zinc and vitamin A
- Omega-3 fatty acids from foods such as oily fish or seaweed
Restrictive diets can sometimes worsen gut health over time.
3. Reduce the factors that promote dysbiosis
Small lifestyle adjustments can have a big impact on the microbiome.
Focus on:
- Regular meal schedule
- Limiting highly processed foods when possible
- Moderate to little or no alcohol intake
- Stress management practices
- Restorative sleep
4. Be careful about supplements
Probiotics, prebiotics, and other gut-targeted supplements may be helpful for some people, but responses vary widely.
Targeted use based on symptoms and medical history is preferable to a one-size-fits-all approach. If you have any questions about probiotics or other gut healers, be sure to ask consult a dietician like myself so you can get the personalized care you deserve.
An important caveat
Gut symptoms can be due to many causes, including functional disorders, infections, autoimmune diseases, medications, or conditions unrelated to the microbiome.
Persistent or severe symptoms require medical evaluation. Self-diagnosis and overly restrictive elimination diets can delay appropriate care.
Individualized assessment is important and having a gastrointestinal specialist on your team is absolutely critical – make sure you have medical support.
The bottom line for treating inflammatory bowel disease
Your microbiome plays a central role in regulating inflammation, digestion and immune function. When the gut environment is disrupted, symptoms can occur in many body systems, not just the digestive tract.
Treatment of inflammatory bowel disease is rarely a single intervention. It involves restoring balance through nutrition, lifestyle support and addressing underlying factors.
If you experience persistent digestive issues, unexplained fatigue, skin changes or inflammatory symptoms, a structured and personalized approach can help you clarify what your body needs.
Want help increasing dietary diversity and fiber the easy way?
Download the anti-inflammatory mini meal plan to guide next steps.
You don’t have to navigate chronic symptoms alone, and substantial improvement is possible with the right support.
