Blog Articles
- The High Price of Antibiotic Use: Can Our Guts Ever Fully Recover?
- What To Do If You Need To Take Antibiotics
- Treat and Prevent UTIs Without Drugs
- Why Diet Alone Is Not Enough to Treat SIBO
- SIBO- What Causes It, and Why It’s So Hard to Treat
- Can a Short-Term Elemental Diet Help Treat SIBO?
- Is Fibromyalgia Caused by SIBO and Leaky Gut?
Podcasts
- RHR: How to Prevent and Treat Recurring Ear Infections—Without Antibiotics
- RHR: SIBO Update – An Interview with Dr. Mark Pimentel
- RHR: Treating SIBO, Cold Thermogenesis, and When to Take Probiotics
- RHR: SIBO and Methane—What’s the Connection?
- RHR: New Treatment for SIBO and IBS-C—with Dr. Kenneth Brown
- RHR: A New Understanding of SIBO and IBS with Dr. Mark Pimentel
Studies
- Clinical trial: the combination of rifaximin with partially hydrolysed guar gum is more effective than rifaximin alone in eradicating small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
- Is generic rifaximin still a poorly absorbed antibiotic? A comparison of branded and generic formulations in healthy volunteers.
- Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth syndrome in children
- Rifaximin treatment for small intestinal bacterial overgrowth in children with irritable bowel syndrome.
- Double-blind, placebo-controlled antibiotic treatment study of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth in children with chronic abdominal pain.
- High dosage rifaximin for the treatment of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth
- Clinical trial: the combination of rifaximin with partially hydrolysed guar gum is more effective than rifaximin alone in eradicating small intestinal bacterial overgrowth
- Herbal therapy is equivalent to rifaximin for the treatment of small intestinal bacterial overgrowth
- Efficacy of a Quebracho, Conker Tree, and M. balsamea Willd Blended Extract in a Randomized Study in Patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome with Constipation
- Response of irritable bowel syndrome with constipation patients administered a combined quebracho/conker tree/M. balsamea Willd extract
- Sulfidogenic Bacteria Abundance in Colonic Mucosa is Positively Correlated with Milk and Animal Fat Intake and Negatively Correlated with Mono and Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids
- Metabolic niche of a prominent sulfate-reducing human gut bacterium
- Successful treatment of postural orthostatic tachycardia and mast cell activation syndromes using naltrexone, immunoglobulin and antibiotic treatment
- Low-dose naltreoxone for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome: a pilot study
- Low dose Naltrexone for induction of remission in inflammatory bowel disease patients
Other
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