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Why Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth (SIBO) Keeps Coming Back—and How to Prevent It

  • 作家相片: Frankie Gan
    Frankie Gan
  • 2025年11月25日
  • 讀畢需時 4 分鐘

“Doctor, I wake up feeling fine. But by late afternoon, my stomach looks and feels swollen no matter what I eat.”That line shows up in clinic more often than you’d think. Sometimes it comes with gas, sometimes cramping, and sometimes constipation for weeks followed by sudden loose stools—or a frustrating mix of both. Many people have already tried cutting gluten, dairy, or whole food groups. A few feel better briefly. Others are told their tests are normal and start wondering if they’re just “too sensitive.”


When this pattern is persistent, especially when it worsens after fermentable foods, SIBO becomes a reasonable possibility. It’s measurable, it’s treatable, and—most importantly—it usually has a “background story” that matters as much as the overgrowth itself.


What SIBO Is (and Why It Feels the Way It Does)


The small intestine is designed for nutrient absorption, so under normal conditions it hosts far fewer bacteria than the colon. In SIBO, bacteria accumulate in the small bowel in higher numbers than they should, or migrate into areas where they don’t belong.


The result is early fermentation. Carbohydrates that should be absorbed are fermented too soon, producing gases like hydrogen and methane (and less commonly hydrogen sulfide). That gas production and local irritation can lead to:


  • bloating and distension

  • abdominal pressure, discomfort, or cramping

  • diarrhea, constipation, or alternating patterns

  • nausea, reflux-like sensations, or early fullness

  • sometimes fatigue or “brain fog,” often linked to inflammation or nutrient malabsorption


Lasting improvement usually requires more than clearing bacteria; it means correcting the conditions that allowed overgrowth in the first place.


SIBO as a Systems Issue


A useful way to understand SIBO is to look beyond the bacteria and focus on the body’s defenses that normally keep the small intestine relatively “clean.” Three interconnected domains matter most:


1. Motility — the “street sweeper.”

The small intestine has a cleaning wave called the Migrating Motor Complex (MMC). It sweeps residual food and bacteria into the colon between meals. If this wave is weak—because of stress physiology, vagus nerve dysfunction, thyroid issues, or post-infection changes—bacteria stagnate and multiply.


2. Digestion — the “acid barrier.”

Stomach acid is a primary disinfectant. If acid is low (hypochlorhydria), often from chronic stress, aging, or long-term PPI use, bacteria survive the stomach and enter the small intestine more easily. Incomplete breakdown of food also increases fermentable fuel downstream.


3. Gut–brain axis — the “wiring.”

Digestion is a parasympathetic (“rest and digest”) process. When someone is chronically in a “fight or flight” state, the vagus nerve signals for movement and secretion weaken. Over time, this creates a sluggish, low-defense environment that favors overgrowth.


Put simply: SIBO often reflects a breakdown in flow, digestion, and regulation—not just exposure to bacteria.


How SIBO Is Evaluated


Breath testing


The most common clinical test is a hydrogen/methane breath test using lactulose or glucose. After drinking the solution, breath samples are collected over a few hours. Early rises in hydrogen or methane suggest fermentation occurring in the small intestine.


Selective advanced or functional testing


When the presentation is complex, recurrent, or accompanied by systemic symptoms, targeted tests can help clarify the picture and drivers, such as:


  • Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs): SCFAs are beneficial in the colon, but elevated levels in certain contexts can suggest bacterial displacement or excess fermentation.

  • Zonulin: A marker used to assess intestinal permeability (“leaky gut”), which can be aggravated by chronic overgrowth-related inflammation.

  • Gluten/celiac markers: To rule out immune-driven gut injury that can mimic or trigger SIBO patterns.

  • Organic Acids Test (OAT): A urine test that surveys bacterial and yeast metabolites, offering a broader view of the internal ecosystem.


Managing SIBO From an Integrative Perspective


SIBO care works best when it reduces overgrowth and restores the gut functions that prevent recurrence.


Reducing bacterial overgrowth


Conventional first-line therapy often uses rifaximin, with combination approaches considered when methane patterns are present. Evidence-guided herbal antimicrobials can be reasonable alternatives or adjuncts for selected patients.


Supporting digestion and gut resilience


When low acid or incomplete digestion is part of the story, digestive or enzymatic support may be included. Barrier repair and anti-inflammatory strategies can improve food tolerance and recovery.


Reintroducing probiotics carefully


Some people worsen with standard probiotics during active SIBO because of added fermentation. More conservative options are often better tolerated, especially yeast probiotics such as Saccharomyces boulardii and spore-based strains, introduced gradually and adjusted to response.


Restoring gut rhythm and motility


This is often the decisive piece for preventing relapse. The goal is to reactivate the MMC and support steady transit. Practical anchors include meal spacing (especially a longer gap between dinner and the first meal of the day), gentle post-meal movement, and—when appropriate—prokinetic support. Simple tools like walking after meals, abdominal massage, and breathwork can reinforce this rhythm.



Summary and Key Takeaways


SIBO is rarely just about bacteria; it usually reflects a loss of flow and defense in the gastrointestinal tract. A durable approach focuses on identifying the main drivers—slowed motility, low acid, or stress-related gut-brain disruption—and correcting them so the small intestine can return to its intended role as an efficient nutrient-absorbing system.


Key takeaways


  • Think “location error.” SIBO is an overgrowth in the wrong place, not a mysterious infection.

  • Test, don’t guess. Breath testing, paired with selective functional markers when needed, gives a clearer roadmap.

  • Motility matters most. Clearing bacteria helps, but maintaining MMC function through meal rhythm and motility support is what reduces recurrence.

  • Treatment is layered. Antimicrobials (herbal or pharmaceutical), digestion support, careful probiotic strategy, and motility reinforcement work best together.

 
 
 

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MD, PhD, IFMCP

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