gut brain axis

SIBO Relapse After Treatment: What Causes Recurrence

SIBO relapse after treatment can feel like a cruel joke: you finally get relief, then your bloating and gut symptoms start returning again.

If you've ever gone through a gut-healing process, felt proud of yourself, and thought you'd finally fixed your gut, only to feel bloated again, you're not alone.

For a lot of people dealing with chronic digestive issues, SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth) can feel like that one houseguest who swears they're leaving, and then you find them back on your couch two weeks later, eating your snacks and turning your belly into a balloon.

You follow the protocol, cut the foods, and take the antimicrobials (or antibiotics). You see improvement, and then, slowly, and in a sneaky way, the symptoms creep back in. That's the frustrating truth.

So, how to prevent SIBO from coming back? It's rarely about finding a stronger treatment. It's about understanding why SIBO showed up in the first place, and what your body still needs after the elimination phase is over.

Because SIBO isn't usually the root problem.

When you stop chasing SIBO as a random infection and start viewing it as a pattern, one that is driven by gut motility, inflammation, the nervous system, and sometimes structural issues, the whole conversation changes. Instead of bracing for the next flare, you start building a body that's less hospitable to overgrowth in the first place.

In this blog post, I'm going to unpack why SIBO so often returns, what most protocols miss, and the mistakes to achieve relapse-proof steps that make the biggest difference long-term.

What is SIBO about?

SIBO stands for Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth.

To simply explain it, it happens when bacteria that are supposed to live mostly in your large intestine (colon) set up shop too high up, in your small intestine, where they don't belong in large numbers. Or it could also be an imbalance in the existing bacteria in the small intestine, since it is not fully sterile as previously thought.

And that matters because your small intestine is designed to be more like a fast-moving highway, not a parking lot. It's where you absorb nutrients. It's not meant to host a large number of microbes. When these bacteria hang out there too long, they start fermenting the carbohydrates you eat too early in the digestive process. Fermentation produces gas, irritation, and inflammation, often within a couple of hours after meals. (1)

Common SIBO symptoms

Most people associate SIBO with bloating, and yes, bloating is a big one, but it's rarely the only symptom.

SIBO can show a wide range of symptoms (2), including:

  • Bloating and distension (sometimes you wake up okay and look 6 months pregnant by dinner),
  • Gas, burping, and abdominal discomfort,
  • Constipation, diarrhea, or a mix of both,
  • Reflux or heartburn (especially if digestion is sluggish),
  • Nausea or feeling overly full quickly,
  • Food sensitivities that seem to multiply over time,
  • Fatigue and brain fog,
  • Weight changes (weight gain or weight loss)
  • Nutrient deficiencies (such as low iron, vitamin B12, or fat-soluble vitamins) occur because absorption is impaired.

For many, SIBO affects not only the gut but also confidence, energy, social life, and mood. When you're constantly wondering what food will set you off, eating stops feeling normal and becomes a gamble.

Types of SIBO and why gas pattern matters

SIBO isn't one single thing. Different gases can predominate, which changes symptoms and what tends to work best. (3)

1) Hydrogen-dominant SIBO
2) Methane-dominant overgrowth (now called IMO – Intestinal Methanogen Overgrowth)
3) Hydrogen Sulfide SIBO (now called ISO – Intestinal Sulfide Overproduction)

You can read more about the differences among the three gas patterns in my previous blog post.

If you've tried a protocol and it kind of helped, but didn't last, it may not be because you didn't try hard enough. It may be because you were treating the wrong pattern or treating the right pattern without addressing what caused it to take hold.

SIBO relapse rate: How common is it for symptoms to come back?

Here's the part no one really warns you about when you start treatment, especially antibiotic treatment: even when you do everything right, SIBO has a reputation for returning.

However, for many people, SIBO isn't the main problem; it's the result of an underlying breakdown in digestion, gut motility, gut structure, or immune function.

If those drivers aren't addressed, the terrain that allowed overgrowth in the first place remains, and bacteria thrive in familiar environments.

Research shows that approximately 45% of patients have recurrent SIBO 9 months after completing antibiotic therapy. (4)

SIBO relapse rate

In clinical practice, recurrence is common within months without a clear prevention plan. Different studies and patient groups report different numbers (depending on treatment type, follow-up time, and underlying conditions), but the overall takeaway is consistent: SIBO relapse isn't rare; it's unfortunately part of the typical story for many chronic gut cases.

Why does that matter? Because it changes the goal.

If the only goal is kill the overgrowth at all costs, you might feel better temporarily and still end up back at square one.

But if the goal is:

  • clear the overgrowth AND
  • restore proper movement of the small intestine (gut motility, namely the Migrating Motor Complex)
  • rebuild digestive function (acid, bile, enzymes)
  • reduce inflammation and support the gut lining
  • strengthen the gut microbiome and immune defenses
  • regulate the nervous system so that digestion can actually work,

then you're no longer just treating SIBO. You're reducing the odds that it can set up camp again.

Think of it like getting rid of mold. You can scrub the visible spots off the wall (that's treatment), but if you don't fix the leak and dry the room (that's prevention), the mold comes right back, usually more stubborn than before.

SIBO relapse after treatment: the real root causes

If SIBO feels like it's recurring out of nowhere, it usually isn't. Most of the time, the bacteria didn't magically return; your gut environment simply stayed (or became) the kind of place where overgrowth is likely to occur.

Here's the key idea: SIBO is often a consequence of a deeper imbalance or dysfunction.

Treating the overgrowth without fixing the cause is like mopping up water while the faucet is still running.

1) Structural or mechanical issues

Your small intestine relies on smooth flow like a moving walkway at the airport. But if there's a structural issue, bacteria can accumulate in pockets or slow zones where they aren't cleared properly.

Common structural or mechanical contributors include:

  • Abdominal adhesions, which are bands of scar‑like tissue that alter movement or create kinks (often after surgeries, including C-sections, appendectomy, gallbladder surgery)
  • Diverticula in the small intestine (less common but relevant)
  • Ileocecal valve dysfunction (the "gate" between the small and large intestine that can contribute to backflow)
  • Endometriosis involvement (can affect motility and create inflammation/adhesions)
  • Pelvic floor dysfunction (especially when constipation is present)

If you're treating SIBO repeatedly but constipation never truly resolves, or symptoms improve, then stall at 60–70%, it may be because there's a physical blockage that's not being addressed. (5) (6)

2) Low digestive secretions

Your digestive tract has built-in protection systems. Stomach acid, bile, and enzymes help break down food and reduce the chance that microbes survive where they shouldn't.

When these are low, it's easier for bacteria to linger and ferment food in the small intestine.

What can contribute?

  • Low stomach acid (common with chronic stress, aging, nutrient deficiencies, H. Pylori infection, or long-term acid blockers) (7)
  • Reduced bile flow (gallbladder issues, sluggish bile, post-gallbladder removal) (8)
  • Inadequate pancreatic enzymes (poor signaling, chronic inflammation, or other digestive dysfunction) (9)

Clues (1) this might be part of your picture:

  • feeling overly full quickly
  • heaviness, feeling like the food sits in the stomach after meals
  • Bloating and visible distension, often within 30–90 minutes after meals
  • reflux that worsens with larger meals
  • nausea, burping
  • greasy stools or trouble tolerating fats
  • undigested food particles in stool

If food isn't being broken down properly, it becomes a feast for bacteria, like tossing scraps into a room and wondering why pests keep showing up.

3) Impaired gut motility (MMC)

This is one of the biggest drivers of recurrence.

Between meals and overnight, during fasting periods, your small intestine uses a specific type of gut motility, called the Migrating Motor Complex (MMC). This rhythmic wave sweeps leftover food and bacteria into the colon. Think of it like the night-shift cleaning crew that clears the hallways after the restaurant closes. (10)

When the MMC is weak or disrupted, bacteria aren't moved along efficiently, so they accumulate, and overgrowth becomes much easier.

Common reasons the MMC gets impaired:

  • chronic constipation or slow transit (11)
  • post-infectious IBS (after food poisoning, which is a very common SIBO story) (12)
  • hypothyroid patterns (even subclinical low thyroid function can slow motility) (13)
  • diabetes and long‑term poorly controlled blood sugar (due to nerve damage) (14)
  • stress and nervous system dysregulation (can alter gut–brain and enteric nervous system signalling) (15)
  • certain conditions like connective tissue disorders, including Ehler-Danlos Syndrome, and systemic sclerosis (scleroderma)

This is why you can go through many rounds of SIBO treatments and still get SIBO relapse, because if gut motility doesn't improve, the terrain hasn't changed.

4) Medications that increase risk

This is not about blaming medications, as many are important and sometimes life-saving. But it is about understanding the downstream effects so you can create a prevention plan.

Some medications can increase SIBO risk by reducing stomach acid, slowing gut movement, or shifting the gut microbiome, including:

  • PPIs / acid blockers (lower stomach acid) (16)
  • opioid pain medications (slow motility dramatically) (17)
  • anticholinergic medications (can slow gut movement) (18)
  • frequent or repeated antibiotic use (19)
  • other drugs that may affect motility, depending on the person and dose

If you need these medications, the goal becomes: How do we support digestion and motility around them? That's where a smart long-term strategy makes all the difference.

How to prevent SIBO relapse

The #1 reason SIBO relapses: not supporting the MMC after treatment

If I could put one message on a billboard for anyone finishing a SIBO protocol, it would be this:

Clearing the overgrowth is only step one. Keeping things moving is step two.

Because the moment you stop treatment, your gut needs to do what it was always meant to do: move food and microbes downstream efficiently. And the system responsible for that self-cleaning function is the Migrating Motor Complex (MMC). (10)

Remember the MMC as your gut's cleaning crew. When it's working well, it sweeps out leftover debris and bacteria from the small intestine between meals and while you sleep. When it's sluggish, those leftovers sit there, and bacteria do what bacteria do: multiply.

This is a huge reason SIBO relapse happens even after a protocol that seemed successful on paper.

We already discussed the possible contributing factors to a dysfunctional MMC.

Now, let's look at the three pillars that make the biggest difference in MMC support:

1) Prokinetics

A prokinetic is something that supports gut motility, specifically, the movement patterns that help the small intestine clear itself. (11)

Some people need prokinetics short-term after treatment; others (especially with constipation, methane/IMO patterns, post-infectious IBS, or long-standing motility issues) may need longer support while you rebuild the bigger picture.

Prokinetics can be:

  • prescription options (your practitioner can determine appropriateness)
  • botanical/nutraceutical options (often used in functional care, ginger-based formulas are common)

Important note: Prokinetics aren't laxatives. They're not just about going to the bathroom. They're about restoring the rhythms that keep the small intestine from becoming a stagnant pond.

You can read more about the function of the MMC and strategies to support it, including prokinetics, in my previous blog post.

2) Meal spacing

This one is deceptively simple and wildly powerful, but also often overlooked.

The MMC only kicks in when you're not constantly eating. If you snack all day, your small intestine stays in digest mode, and the cleaning crew never gets a proper shift. (20)

A helpful guideline for many people:

  • Aim for 3,5–5 hours between meals
  • Avoid grazing/snacking (unless medically necessary)
  • Consider at least a 12-hour overnight fast (for example: finish dinner at 7 pm, eat breakfast at 7 am)

If that sounds intense, remember: you're not trying to starve yourself. You don't need to do long fasts, as they may not be suitable for everyone. You're just giving your gut the quiet time it needs to run its natural maintenance program.

And if you have blood sugar issues, adrenal symptoms, or a history of disordered eating, this should be personalized because for your nervous system safety comes first. But most people can find a version of meal spacing that feels supportive rather than stressful.

3) Diet after treatment

A very common pattern I see is this:

Someone treats SIBO, feels better, and then stays on a very restrictive diet (like low-FODMAP) for months because they're terrified of symptoms returning.

But here's the twist: long-term restriction can make the microbiome less diverse and more fragile, like stripping your garden down to bare soil and then wondering why weeds return. (21)

In many cases, prevention looks like:

  • a short-term, symptom-guided approach right after treatment
  • gradual reintroduction of tolerated fibers and FODMAPs
  • prioritizing meal structure (for MMC support) over endless avoidance
  • building a more diverse plate over time, so your gut becomes adaptable again

The goal isn't following a perfect diet. The goal is a gut that doesn't overreact to food.

Treatment mistakes that set you up for a SIBO relapse

1) Abandoning treatment because die-off feels scary (and no one prepared you for it)

One of the most common reasons a protocol doesn't stick isn't a lack of effort. It's quite the opposite: you start treatment, symptoms begin to flare, and you start panicking.

Bloating ramps up, you feel nauseous, get a headache, wired-but-tired, constipation gets worse, your skin breaks out, your anxiety spikes, and you might even start reacting to foods that were previously safe.

And in that moment, a very reasonable thought pops up in your mind: "This is making me feel worse. I should stop."

Sometimes that flare is a sign the plan needs adjusting. That is why it's important to work with a practitioner during that phase.

But often, it's a sign that the body is overwhelmed by the pace of the elimination without enough support for clearing and calming. When that happens, people get scared and abandon the protocol mid-way, which can leave the overgrowth partially suppressed, but not fully resolved, making SIBO relapse more likely.

What helps instead is having die-off supporting strategies built into the plan, such as:

  • keeping bowel movements moving (because stagnation amplifies symptoms)
  • supporting bile flow and gentle detox pathways
  • using binders strategically when appropriate
  • titrating dosage (starting low, ramping slowly) instead of going full throttle on day one
  • building in nervous system support (because stress chemistry worsens gut symptoms fast)

In other words, it's not that your body is failing the protocol; it's that the protocol may be moving faster than your body can process.

2) Treating the overgrowth while constipation is still unresolved

This is a huge one, especially if you tend toward constipation or methane/IMO patterns.

If you're not having consistent, complete bowel movements, bacteria, gas, and inflammatory byproducts aren't being cleared efficiently.

It's like taking out one bag of trash while the rest keeps piling up in the kitchen, and then eventually the whole house starts to smell, no matter how many candles you light.

It's often smarter to work on constipation before you start an elimination protocol. Why? Because bowel movements are one of your body's main detox channels. If things aren't moving, the body has nowhere to put the byproducts of treatment, which can intensify symptoms (bloating, headaches, nausea, fatigue, irritability, skin flares), and you're more likely to stop early or feel like treatment didn't work.

In methane/IMO cases, this matters even more because methane itself can slow motility, so constipation isn't just a symptom, it's part of the mechanism. Supporting gut motility and elimination first often makes the entire protocol more tolerable, more effective, and less likely to lead to SIBO relapse.

3) Treating the wrong type (or not understanding methane/IMO gas shifts)

Not all SIBO is created equal. Hydrogen-dominant, methane (often called IMO), and hydrogen sulfide patterns can look similar, but they don't always respond to the same approach or timeline.

A common mistake is using a standard SIBO protocol for a methane-dominant case and expecting the same speed and results.

Methane/IMO often requires:

  • a more targeted strategy
  • longer support
  • and a stronger emphasis on gut motility and constipation from day one

Here's an important factor I want you to know: methanogens feed on hydrogen. They basically eat hydrogen and convert it into methane. So when you successfully reduce methane, hydrogen may increase on a breath test, not necessarily because you caused a new problem, but because hydrogen is no longer being used up to make methane.

This is one reason people feel better after the first round (less constipation, less heaviness), but still have lingering bloating or symptom flares and may need a second, more strategic phase to fully stabilize the terrain and reduce the risk of SIBO relapse.

4) Die-off, drainage, and elimination issues

If the body can't move things out well, treatment can become a rough ride.

When bacteria die, they release inflammatory compounds.

If you don't support:

  • regular bowel movements
  • bile flow
  • hydration and minerals
  • liver detox pathways (in a practical, non-woo way)
  • gentle binders when appropriate

You can end up feeling worse, stopping too early, or swinging into inflammation that keeps the gut reactive.

And if constipation worsens during treatment, it can create a setting where bacterial debris lingers, further increasing the risk of recurrence.

5) Skipping follow-up tracking

Many people complete a protocol, experience improvement, and understandably want to move on with their lives. But without a follow-up plan, it's easy to miss the early warning signs that things are drifting again.

What helps prevent backsliding isn't obsession, it's simple tracking:

  • A short symptom log for 2–4 weeks post-treatment (bloating, pain, stool frequency/consistency, reflux, energy)
  • Noting food triggers and non-food triggers (stress, sleep, cycle timing, travel)
  • A clear maintenance plan (MMC support, meal spacing, gentle reintroductions)

And in some cases, a follow-up SIBO breath test can be useful, especially if symptoms persist, shift types (constipation → diarrhea), or you're trying to confirm whether you cleared methane/IMO vs simply reduced it.

When this step is skipped, many people don't realize they're headed toward SIBO relapse until symptoms are loud again, at which point it feels like starting over.

6) Missing other causes: co-infections, oral microbiome, and reinfection patterns

Sometimes SIBO keeps coming back because you're treating the overgrowth, but not addressing what's feeding it or what's reintroducing it.

A few commonly missed pieces:

Co-infections and gut neighbors

  • Parasites or protozoa can drive inflammation and gut motility disruption, making overgrowth easier to maintain (22)
  • In some cases, fungal overgrowth (SIFO) can be part of the picture too, especially when symptoms don't match typical SIBO patterns or relapse is rapid (23)

Oral microbiome
The digestive tract starts in the mouth. Gum disease, chronic tonsil issues, and poor oral microbial balance can continually seed the gut with less-than-ideal bacteria. It's not the first place we look, but in stubborn cases, it can be a missing link. (24)

Reinfection patterns (especially after food poisoning)
A surprising number of chronic SIBO cases start after a bout of food poisoning or traveller's diarrhea. In post-infectious cases, gut motility disruption can linger, so even after you clear overgrowth, you're still vulnerable unless the MMC is actively supported. And if you're frequently exposed to risky food/water (travel, certain workplaces), prevention strategies matter. (12)

This doesn't mean you need to test everything under the sun. It means that if you're stuck in repeat protocols, it may be time to widen the lens because preventing SIBO relapse sometimes requires finding the upstream driver you didn't know was there.

The repair phase that is often skipped

One reason people fall into repeat rounds of treatment is that they focus on getting rid of the bugs, but skip the part where the gut actually recovers.

Think of it like this: treatment is the renovation crew that clears out the damaged drywall. The repair phase is where you rebuild the walls, seal the cracks, and make the house livable again. If you don't do that second part, your gut stays reactive, and SIBO relapse becomes much easier.

I often see this when clients come from a conventional doctor's office: they have received treatment and were sent on their way, hoping for the best.

Here are the three essential factors:

1) Calm inflammation

When your gut lining is irritated, it becomes more permeable and reactive, so normal foods can feel like threats, digestion gets more sensitive, and gut motility can slow down.

Common inflammation drivers after SIBO treatment include:

  • a stressed gut barrier (often called "leaky gut")
  • histamine overload (reacting to leftovers, fermented foods, wine, aged cheeses)
  • bile irritation (especially if stools burn, urgency is high, or fats feel difficult to digest)

The goal here is to create a calmer internal environment so your gut can digest, move, and rebuild.

2) Rebuild the gut microbiome

A big mistake is staying in avoid everything mode for too long. Yes, symptom-friendly eating can help in the short term, but in the long term, your gut needs diversity to be resilient.

What rebuilding (although I don't like this word, as you can't really "rebuild" but rather support your gut environment) often looks like:

  • food-first variety (slowly expanding tolerated plants)
  • using prebiotics carefully (helpful for some, too gassy for others at first)
  • probiotics based on your pattern and tolerance (not random mega-dosing; it is better to start with strain-specific products first, which are backed up by research)
  • polyphenol-rich foods (berries, herbs, green tea, colorful plants)
  • fermented foods only if they work for your body (not if histamine intolerance is still present)

This is where many people finally stop feeling like their gut is one wrong bite away from chaos.

3) Replenish the basics

SIBO can quietly drain nutrients by compromising absorption (25), and deficiencies make it harder to rebuild the gut lining and support motility.

Common ones to check:

  • iron/ferritin (energy, oxygenation, thyroid function)
  • vitamin B12 and folate (nerves, energy, digestion signaling)
  • vitamin D (immune balance) and other fat‑soluble vitamins (A, E) (gut lining, immunity)
  • magnesium and zinc (motility, tissue repair)

You don't need to supplement everything; just identify what's low and replete strategically.

The role of lifestyle & the nervous system in the SIBO plan

If you've ever been told it's just stress and wanted to scream into a pillow, well, same. Stress is not a personality flaw, and it's not a useful explanation unless it comes with a plan.

But here's what is true: your digestion doesn't run on willpower. It runs on your nervous system.

Your gut and brain are in constant conversation through the gut–brain axis, and the vagus nerve is basically the main "cable" connecting them. When your system feels safe and regulated, digestion flows: acid, enzymes, bile, and motility. When your system is stuck in fight-or-flight, digestion gets deprioritized because your body thinks survival comes first. (26)

What stress physiology actually does to digestion

When cortisol and adrenaline run the show, a few very real things can happen:

  • stomach acid and enzyme output can drop (food sits longer, fermentation increases)
  • gut motility can slow (hello constipation, or incomplete elimination)
  • gut permeability can increase (more reactivity, more inflammation)
  • pain sensitivity increases (you feel everything more)

This is why you can do the perfect protocol and still struggle with SIBO relapse if your system is constantly running on high alert.

Sleep is the most underrated prokinetic

I say this lovingly: your MMC loves a bedtime.

Poor sleep and irregular schedules can throw off circadian rhythms that support digestion and motility. (27)

If you're going to bed at 11 one night, 1 am the next, eating late, waking up wired, the gut often follows that chaos.

Even small improvements, such as consistent sleep/wake times, earlier dinners, and dimming lights at night, can make motility more reliable over time.

Practical tools that actually help (no 60-minute morning routine required)

This isn't about adding more to-dos. It's about giving your body small daily signals of safety.

A few options that are simple but powerful:

  • 2–5 minutes of slow breathing before meals (longer exhales cue "rest and digest")
  • walking 10 minutes after meals to support motility and blood sugar
  • heat on the belly or a gentle abdominal massage for some constipation patterns
  • daily downshifts: sunlight in the morning, brief stretch breaks, less multitasking while eating
  • if your history includes chronic anxiety, trauma, or high vigilance: trauma-informed support can be a game changer for gut healing (because the gut doesn't heal well in survival mode)

How to know if this is your missing piece

Lifestyle and nervous system work matter most when:

  • symptoms flare during stress, travel, conflict, deadlines, or poor sleep
  • you feel worse when you eat on the run (even your safe foods that normally don't trigger any symptoms)
  • constipation or diarrhea gets worse when you're anxious
  • you're stuck in a cycle of restriction and fear around food
  • you've treated everything and still feel reactive

 

The bottom line for SIBO relapse

If SIBO has come back more than once, it can feel like your body is betraying you, or you just haven't tried hard enough.

But SIBO relapse is common for a reason: most approaches focus solely on clearing bacteria without addressing the conditions that let them thrive, or following an incomplete treatment sequence.

The empowering flip side? When you follow the right sequence: clearing overgrowth, restoring gut motility, supporting digestion, calming inflammation, rebuilding the microbiome, and regulating the nervous system, prevention becomes realistic.

SIBO relapse is often a sign that one key piece of the puzzle was missed.

And that's the reframe I want you to keep: SIBO isn't a life sentence.

It's your gut's way of saying: "something upstream needs attention." When you learn to read that signal (instead of just chasing symptoms), you stop living in fear of the next flare and start building real stability.

 

 

Disclaimer: 

The information provided on this site is for educational purposes only, is not intended as medical advice, and does not claim to diagnose, heal, treat, or cure any conditions. Always consult with a healthcare professional before starting any dietary regimen, supplement, or lifestyle changes, especially if you have underlying health conditions or are taking medication. 

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The Gut and Emotions Connection: Why Symptoms Are Often Messages, Not Mistakes

Many women live with symptoms like bloating, cravings, fatigue, or weight changes, and end up blaming themselves. They assume they should eat better, have more discipline or willpower, or just push through it.

But these symptoms are not random and are not character flaws.

In functional nutrition and gut health coaching, one thing becomes clear very quickly:
Your gut and emotions are not separate systems. They are in constant conversation.

This gut and emotions connection is one of the most overlooked reasons women continue to feel unwell, even when they’re trying their best.

Recently, well-being coach Michaela and I collaborated to explore how your emotional state and your digestive system influence one another.

Below is a shortened version of our full collaborative article.

To read the full post in more depth, see the link at the end.

Why symptoms show up together

If you're dealing with chronic bloating, unpredictable cravings, exhaustion, or weight fluctuations, there's a reason these symptoms tend to cluster.

Your gut, nervous system, and hormones are intertwined.

When one shifts, the others respond, sometimes dramatically.

Bloating

Often reflects digestive sluggishness, microbial imbalance, food reactions, or stress-driven changes in gut motility. Stress-based bloating behaves differently from microbiome-related bloating, something many women don't realize.

Cravings & emotional eating

Blood sugar swings, cortisol spikes, neurotransmitter imbalances, and emotional stress all contribute. The gut and emotions connection plays a major role in how, why, and when cravings appear.

Fatigue

Low energy is frequently linked to nutrient absorption issues, inflammation, mitochondrial stress, or hormonal changes, all of which are influenced by gut health.

Weight fluctuations

Hormones, gut bacteria, stress patterns, and emotional coping strategies each affect metabolism far more than simple calorie math.

The Gut–Emotion Connection: Why You Feel Bloated, Tired & Craving Sugar

The gut and emotions connection (a closer look)

Your gut does much more than digest food:

  • It produces neurotransmitters like serotonin and GABA

  • It communicates with the brain through the vagus nerve

  • It influences cortisol, estrogen, thyroid hormones, and blood sugar

  • It reacts instantly to emotional states

This means:

Your emotional landscape directly affects digestion, motility, and food reactions.

Your gut chemistry shapes mood, cravings, energy, and emotional resilience.

When the connection becomes dysregulated, symptoms appear, sometimes subtly, sometimes loudly.

Root causes behind the symptoms

Both emotional patterns and biological imbalances tend to create the same symptom picture.

Common contributors include:

  • microbiome imbalance

  • low stomach acid or digestive insufficiency

  • chronic inflammation

  • cortisol dysregulation

  • nervous system overload

  • nutrient deficiencies

  • hormonal shifts influenced by gut health

These don’t occur in isolation. They form patterns, and those patterns express themselves as the symptoms women know so well.

Healing requires both: the body and the emotional world

A gut-healing diet alone cannot resolve emotional triggers.

Mindset coaching alone cannot repair dysbiosis or gut motility issues.

Sustainable healing happens when you support:

1. Biology

  • structured meals

  • balanced plates for blood sugar stability

  • anti-inflammatory nourishment

  • optimized digestion and motility

  • nutrient and microbiome support

2. Behavior

  • how you eat (your pace, tension, presence)

  • identifying emotional versus physical hunger

  • interrupting autopilot patterns

3. Beliefs & emotional safety

  • addressing perfectionism

  • reducing self-pressure

  • regulating the nervous system

  • rebuilding trust with your body

This is where the gut and emotions connection becomes truly transformative, when you support both sides at the same time.

This post is for informational purposes only and not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any medical condition. Please consult your healthcare provider before making any medical or dietary changes.

Read the full article

This is a condensed version of the full collaborative piece Michaela and I created.

👉 Read the complete and detailed version on Michaela’s website

In her version, you’ll find deeper insights into:

  • stress-based vs. microbiome-based bloating

  • emotional eating biology

  • the gut–hormone–stress loop

  • functional testing options

  • the 3-level healing model

  • practical tools for gut + emotional regulation

If you’ve been struggling with symptoms that don’t make sense, this full article will help you finally see the bigger picture.

Authors:

Michaela is a certified well-being

Michaela Czernekova, Ph.D.

Michaela is a certified wellbeing coach and nutrition consultant with a Ph.D. in cell biology. She combines evidence-based knowledge, research background with a compassionate coaching approach.

She specializes in emotional eating, stress management, and overall well-being, helping clients understand their patterns, create healthier habits, and build a balanced relationship with food and themselves. If you would like to find more emotional balance and inner peace, check out her book here: www.michaelaczernekova.com

Check out her book here
Alexandra Ress

Alexandra Ress-Sarkadi

Alexandra is a Functional Medicine Certified Health Coach & Holistic Nutritionist specializing in IBS, SIBO, and gut health. She helps her clients identify root causes through functional testing, restore gut function, support their bodies holistically to regain control, and enjoy food freedom. 

Book a free SIBO & Gut Assessment call here

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Gut-Brain Axis: How Nervous System Dysregulation Fuels SIBO Symptoms

Ever feel like your gut just didn't get the memo?

You're eating clean, avoiding gluten and dairy like the plague, and popping the "right" supplements… you even went through an elimination protocol, but you're still bloated, gassy, or running to the bathroom (or worse—not going at all).

Maybe you've been diagnosed with SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth) or IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome). Maybe your food sensitivities are multiplying faster than you can say "elimination diet."

Here's the truth no one talks about enough:

It's not just about what you eat. It's about how your body and your nervous system feel when you eat.

That's right. The state of your nervous system could be the reason your gut hasn't fully healed, no matter how many gut protocols, probiotics, or low-FODMAP recipes you've tried.

In this blog post, I'm going to dive deep into the gut-brain connection, how nervous system dysregulation fuels gut dysfunction, and the often-overlooked role of the vagus nerve in digestive health. Most importantly, you'll learn what you can do about it—starting today.

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This blog post contains affiliate links to products and services, such as the Primal Trust Academy. If you click on these links and make a purchase, I may receive a small commission at no extra cost to you. This helps support my website and allows me to continue providing valuable content. I only recommend products and services that I believe will be helpful to my readers.

gut-brain axis - nervous system support for SIBO

The gut-brain axis

Imagine your gut and brain as two best friends texting each other all day long. That constant stream of messages—about hunger, stress, emotions, and immune responses—is called the gut-brain axis. And the phone line they use? That would be your vagus nerve.

The vagus nerve is like your body's internal Wi-Fi network—an information superhighway that connects your brainstem to your heart, lungs, and digestive tract. It tells your stomach to release acid, your intestines to move food along, and your immune system to stay calm.

Here's the kicker: This communication is bi-directional. That means…

  • A stressed-out brain can send danger signals to the gut, slowing digestion and triggering inflammation.
  • And a troubled gut—say, with dysbiosis (imbalance between the beneficial and pathogenic gut flora), SIBO, or leaky gut—can send distress signals back to the brain, contributing to anxiety, brain fog, and mood swings.

This is why you can't "out-supplement" or "out-diet" chronic gut issues if your nervous system is stuck in fight-or-flight mode. Healing your gut starts with helping your body feel safe.

What really happens when you're stuck in survival mode

Let's take a moment to talk about stress, not just the obvious kind like deadlines or family drama, but the sneaky, chronic type your body may have normalized over the years.

  • Emotional stress (e.g., work pressure, grief)
  • Past trauma (e.g., violence, accidents)
  • Chronic illness (e.g., autoimmune diseases, infections)
  • Physiological stress (e.g., nutrient deficiencies, over-exercising, undereating, physical injury)
  • Environmental stress (e.g., noise, pollution, mold exposure)

They all keep your body in a sympathetic state, or "fight or flight." When you're in that mode, digestion is the last thing your body wants to deal with.

Think about it: if a lion is chasing you, your body doesn't care about digesting your kale salad—it wants to run.

Here's what stress does to your digestion

Slows gut motility:

When you're calm and relaxed, your digestive system creates rhythmic contractions called the migrating motor complex (MMC) that get activated between meals in a fasted state. Think of it like a gentle wave that sweeps through your intestines, keeping things moving and clean.

But under chronic stress, these contractions slow down—or stop altogether. Food lingers too long in the small intestine, giving bacteria time to ferment it and multiply where they shouldn't be. That's how Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO) starts.

Lowers stomach acid & digestive enzyme output:

Stress diverts your body's energy to muscles (for fighting or fleeing), not digestion. One of the first casualties? Stomach acid and digestive enzymes.

Without enough stomach acid:

  • Food doesn't break down properly.
  • Proteins ferment instead of digesting—leading to bloating, gas, and discomfort.
  • You can't absorb essential nutrients like vitamin B12, iron, magnesium, and zinc.
  • And you lose your body's natural first line of defense against harmful microbes.

Low enzymes = poor breakdown of carbs, fats, and proteins → indigestion and malabsorption. And guess who loves leftover, undigested food? Yep, bad gut bugs.

Weakens the gut lining:

Your gut lining is like a finely tuned security system, only allowing in nutrients and keeping out unwanted intruders. But when you're in a constant state of stress, the tight junctions in your gut wall loosen. This condition is known as intestinal permeability or leaky gut.

What slips through? Undigested food particles, toxins, and pathogens. Your immune system sees these as threats and mounts an inflammatory response, leading to:

This is the reason why people under stress suddenly "react" to foods they've eaten for years.

Disrupts the gut microbiome:

Your microbiome—the trillions of bacteria living in your gut—is incredibly sensitive to stress. Under normal conditions, beneficial bacteria help regulate digestion, mood, and immunity.

But stress is like a natural disaster in the gut:

  • It kills off beneficial strains of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacteria
  • It allows opportunistic pathogens (like Candida, H. pylori, or certain Clostridium species) to take over
  • It increases gut pH, which changes the environment and allows the "bad gut bugs" to thrive

The result? More bloating, poor nutrient absorption, and increased inflammation. Plus, an imbalanced microbiome means your gut can't support hormone detox or healthy neurotransmitter production.

Dysregulates neurotransmitters:

You've probably heard that your gut is your "second brain"—and it's true. Your gut bacteria help produce critical neurotransmitters, like:

  • Serotonin (mood stabilizer and feel-good hormone—90% is made in the gut!)
  • Dopamine (motivation and reward)
  • GABA (calm, anti-anxiety)

When your gut is inflamed or out of balance, the production of these chemical messengers drops. That's why so many people with digestive issues also struggle with:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Brain fog
  • Sleep issues
  • Emotional ups and downs

It's not "just in your head"—it's happening in your gut-brain axis.

The Vagus nerve: your digestive system's on/off switch

Think of your vagus nerve as the thermostat of your nervous system. It helps you shift from fight-or-flight (sympathetic) into rest-and-digest (parasympathetic). If your vagus nerve isn't working properly—what we call low vagal tone—you'll struggle to stay in that rest-and-digest state long enough for healing to happen.

Low vagal tone can lead to:

  • Bloating and gas
  • Constipation or diarrhea
  • Slow gastric emptying
  • SIBO relapses
  • GERD or acid reflux
  • Anxiety, brain fog, and insomnia
  • Histamine intolerance or MCAS symptoms
  • Poor heart rate variability (HRV)
  • Trouble swallowing or shallow breathing​​

If you've ever felt like your body is "stuck in high alert," or you can't relax no matter how tired you are, chances are your vagus nerve needs support.

Vagus nerve and SIBO

Nervous system dysregulation and SIBO

SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth) happens when bacteria that should stay in the large intestine start growing in the small intestine. Since the small intestine is designed for nutrient absorption—not fermentation—this overgrowth can cause major digestive issues.

Common SIBO symptoms:

  • Bloating (especially after eating)
  • Gas and distension
  • Diarrhea, constipation, or both
  • Nutrient deficiencies (B12, iron, fat-soluble vitamins)
  • Abdominal pain and discomfort
  • Brain fog and fatigue
  • Muscle and joint pain
  • Skin issues (eczema, rosacea, acne)

SIBO isn't just about bacteria. It's about what allowed those bacteria to overgrow in the first place.

And one of the biggest root causes? Impaired gut motility, which is often driven by a dysregulated nervous system.

When you're stuck in sympathetic dominance:

  • Your migrating motor complex (MMC)—the "housekeeping wave" that cleans your small intestine—doesn't work properly.
  • Your body underproduces digestive juices, leading to poorly digested food that ferments and feeds the wrong bugs.
  • You lose natural antibacterial defenses like stomach acid and bile.

So, yes—herbs, antimicrobials, antibiotics, and diets can help temporarily. But if you want lasting SIBO relief? You have to support your nervous system and vagal tone.

How to heal the nervous system-gut axis naturally

The best part? You don't need a fancy device or endless supplements to start improving your nervous system health.

Here's what I recommend to my gut clients:

Vagus nerve activation techniques

These help shift your body into parasympathetic mode (rest-and-digest):

  • Deep belly breathing (especially 4-7-8 breathing before meals)
  • Gargling or humming—stimulates throat muscles linked to the vagus nerve
  • Cold exposure (like splashing your face with cold water)
  • Singing or chanting (yes, it works!)
  • Meditation and loving-kindness practices
  • Yoga and tai chi—especially poses like legs up the wall

Somatic & mind-body healing

You can't "think" your way out of chronic stress. You have to feel your way out. These help discharge stored stress from the body:

  • Somatic tracking and interoception (noticing internal sensations)
  • EFT tapping (Emotional Freedom Techniques)
  • TRE (tension and trauma release exercises)
  • Grounding and time in nature
  • Co-regulation with others (safe connection is healing)

Brain retraining & nervous system programs

If your symptoms are deeply entrenched, consider working with structured programs like:

  • Nerva App – a gut-directed hypnotherapy program clinically proven for IBS/SIBO relief
  • The Gupta Program – rewires limbic and vagus nerve dysfunction
  • Primal Trust™ – blends somatics, trauma work, and nervous system education for deep healing​​

I am currently participating in the Primal Trust program, learning to regulate my nervous system better, process and release stored emotions, and ultimately cultivate a sense of peace and resilience in my life. This is also something I regularly recommend to my clients.

Primal Trust Academy offers a comprehensive approach to help individuals release stuck emotions and regulate their nervous systems. This can be particularly beneficial for those dealing with the long-term effects of trauma.

Here's how the academy can support you:

  • Somatic practices: Techniques that focus on body awareness and movement to release stored tension and emotions.
  • Mind-body integration: Programs that integrate mindfulness, meditation, and breathing exercises to calm the nervous system.
  • Emotional processing: Guided exercises to help recognize, process, and release trapped emotions.
  • Community support: Access to a supportive community where you can share experiences and gain insights from others on a similar journey.

Nervous system-supporting eating tips

  • Eat in a calm, seated environment. No phones, no rushing.
  • Take 3–5 deep breaths before each meal.
  • Chew your food thoroughly (20–30 times per bite!).
  • Don't eat in fight-or-flight—go for a quick walk or breathwork break if needed.
  • Don't under-eat—undereating = a major stressor for the nervous system.

You're not broken—your body's just trying to protect you

Let me remind you of something important:

If your body is stuck in stress mode, it's not because you've failed.

It's because your body is trying to protect you.

Maybe from trauma. Maybe from overexertion. Maybe from years of ignoring symptoms because life demanded it.

But guess what? You can teach it something new. You can help it feel safe. You can restore trust between your brain and your gut.

Healing your gut means healing all of you.

If you're tired of the food fears, bloating, and constant worry over what's going to trigger your next flare, know this:

Healing your gut isn't just about food. It's about feeling safe in your body.

Healing starts with the nervous system.

So next time you're tempted to add another supplement or cut another food, pause and ask yourself:

  • Am I actually feeling safe and calm when I eat?
  • Is my nervous system supported in this healing process?

Because once your body feels safe, everything else—digestion, hormones, energy, mood—starts to fall into place.

 

 

Disclaimer: 

The information provided on this site is for educational purposes only, is not intended as medical advice, and does not claim to diagnose, heal, treat, or cure any conditions Always consult with a healthcare professional before starting any dietary regimen, supplement, or lifestyle changes, especially if you have underlying health conditions or are taking medication. 

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