Ingredients

Probiotics

Promote a Healthy Body & Mind With Probiotics 

  • Balances intestinal flora
  • Promotes balanced digestion and healthy regularity
  • Helps make the feel-good neurotransmitter serotonin
  • Influences brain function through the Gut Microbiome System

The Gut-Brain Connection

Inside your gut is what scientists call your enteric nervous system - your second brain! Your intestinal microbiome is a collection of bacteria, yeasts, and viruses that live in your gut and do an enormous amount of work to keep you healthy.

A growing body of evidence has shown two-way signaling between the gut and the brain. This includes multiple neuro and endocrine signal mechanisms. Changes to the gut microbiome affect brain health.

    • Balances intestinal flora
    • Promotes balanced digestion and healthy regularity
    • Helps make the feel-good neurotransmitter serotonin
    • Influences brain function through the Gut Microbiome System

The Best Ingredients Make the Best Vitamins

Our community of science authorities looks at thousands of studies to consciously choose each nutrient in our vitamins. These nutrients are continuously researched so we only deliver science-backed benefits.

Research Papers

Probiotics in human health and disease: from nutribiotics to pharmabiotics, J Microbiol. 2018;56(11):773-782. doi:10.1007/s12275-018-8293-y.

Korea Food Research Institute, Korea

Probiotics and medical nutrition therapy, Nutr Clin Care. 2004;7(2):56-68.

University of Hawaii at Manoa, USA

Acne vulgaris, probiotics and the gut-brain-skin axis - back to the future? Gut Pathog. 2011;3(1):1. Published 2011 Jan 31. doi:10.1186/1757-4749-3-1.

State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, USA

The effects of probiotics on depressive symptoms in humans: a systematic review, Ann Gen Psychiatry. 2017; 16: 14. Published online 2017 Feb 20.

Queen’s University, Canada

Effects of regulating gut microbiota on the serotonin metabolism in the chronic unpredictable mild stress rat model, Neurogastroenterology & Motility, Volume31, Issue10, October 2019, e13677.

Qingdao University, China

Serotonin Transporter Deficiency is Associated with Dysbiosis and Changes in Metabolic Function of the Mouse Intestinal Microbiome, Sci Rep 9, 2138 (2019).

University of Illinois at Chicago, USA