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Memory Would Deteriorate when the Health of Intestinal Bacteria Deteriorates, According to a Study by Stanford in Mice

Researchers from Stanford Medicine and the Arc Institute in California have shown in mice that aging digestive bacteria blurs the dialogue between the stomach and the brain, following a study published in March 2026 in Nature. Restoring this dialogue was enough to make old rodents as strong a memory as that of young people. The intestinal-brain axis thus appears as a sort of remote control of memory, which can be activated from the intestine. A …
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Researchers from Stanford Medicine and the Arc Institute in California have shown in mice that aging digestive bacteria blurs the dialogue between the stomach and the brain, following a study published in March 2026 in Nature. Restoring this dialogue was enough to make old rodents as strong a memory as that of young people. The intestinal-brain axis thus appears as a sort of remote control of memory, which can be activated from the intestine. A …

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Science-et-vie.com broke the news on Saturday, July 11, 2026.
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