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Gut Dysbiosis and the Brain: What the Research Now Confirms About Autism

May 31, 2026 2 min read

A growing body of peer-reviewed research is now confirming with precision what the Nemechek Protocol has long been built on: an imbalance of intestinal bacteria is a central driver of the neurological dysfunction seen in autism and other neurodevelopmental conditions.

The Normal Gut Architecture

The intestinal tract has distinct regions, each home to different bacterial species. Under normal conditions, these populations stay where they belong. When bacteria from the colon migrate into the small intestine, you get SIBO. The result is a cascade of inflammation, leaky gut, and in children with autism, the overproduction of propionic acid.

What the Research Is Showing

Recent peer-reviewed papers document this pathway in detail — elevated propionic acid, increased lipopolysaccharides in the bloodstream, overactive microglia, and systemic neuroinflammation as the downstream consequences. The research confirms a clear sequence: SIBO drives leaky gut, which drives systemic inflammation, which drives neuroinflammation. In the brain, this leads to impaired pruning causing developmental delay, and ANS dysfunction causing low brain blood pressure — which produces hyperactivity, anxiety, aggression, and ADD-like symptoms.

The Cascade of Recovery

When SIBO is corrected — through inulin in younger children, rifaximin in older children and adults — the cascade runs in reverse. Propionic acid drops, producing the Awakening. Inflammation falls, allowing neuronal pruning to resume. The autonomic nervous system begins to stabilize. Hyperactivity and aggression decline first, then anxiety, then ADD-like focus issues improve as brain blood pressure normalizes.

What This Means for Treatment

If your child is being treated for autism and the focus is not specifically on gut bacterial balance and inflammation reduction, the underlying biological problem is not being addressed. The gut-brain connection in autism is confirmed by multiple independent research groups worldwide.


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Medical Disclaimer: The information in this article is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. The Nemechek Protocol is not a cure for autism or any other medical condition. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider before making changes to your child's health regimen. Individual results vary.


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