The Neuro Serge and the Gut-Brain Axis: Why Calmness Begi…

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The Neuro Serge and the Gut-Brain Axis: Why Calmness Begins in the Digestive System

Health

The Enteric Nervous System and Mood

The gut contains over 500 million neurons — more than the spinal cord — and communicates with the brain via the vagus nerve, the immune system, and the endocrine system. This bidirectional communication channel is called the gut-brain axis. The majority of the body’s serotonin (90% by some estimates) is produced in the gut, not the brain. When gut health is compromised — through dysbiosis, intestinal permeability, or inflammation — the signals sent to the brain via the gut-brain axis can shift mood and stress reactivity toward anxiety and depression.

Psychobiotics and Mood

Psychobiotics are probiotic strains that produce measurable effects on mood and anxiety when consumed in adequate amounts. Lactobacillus helveticus and Bifidobacterium longum have been shown in clinical trials to reduce anxiety and depression scores comparable to conventional antidepressants. These bacteria produce GABA, serotonin precursors, and short-chain fatty acids that cross the blood-brain barrier and influence neural function. Neuro Serge is formulated to support the gut-brain axis through both probiotic and adaptogenic mechanisms.

Iron Role in Brain Energy Metabolism

Iron is essential for brain function far beyond its role in haemoglobin and oxygen transport. The brain consumes approximately 20% of the body oxygen despite accounting for only 2% of body weight, and iron is critical in this energy metabolism — particularly in the electron transport chain within mitochondria, where iron-sulfur clusters are essential components of Complexes I, II, and III. Iron is also a cofactor for tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in dopamine synthesis, and for ribonucleotide reductase, the enzyme required for DNA synthesis. These roles mean that iron deficiency — even without frank anaemia — can impair dopaminergic signalling, reduce neural energy production, and compromise myelin formation, with measurable effects on attention, memory, and executive function.

Why Iron Deficiency Is So Common

Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency worldwide, affecting an estimated 2 billion people. In menstruating women, iron deficiency is particularly prevalent due to monthly menstrual blood loss — even a “normal” menstrual iron loss of 30-40ml per cycle can gradually deplete iron stores over months to years. In men and post-menopausal women, iron deficiency should always be investigated as it can signal occult gastrointestinal blood loss. The symptoms of iron deficiency extend well beyond fatigue and pallor: restless legs syndrome (strongly associated with brain iron deficiency), impaired thermoregulation, reduced exercise tolerance, and cognitive impairment in both children and adults.

Iron Status: Not Just Haemoglobin

The standard diagnostic marker for iron deficiency is haemoglobin — but this misses the majority of iron-deficient people, because haemoglobin only falls after iron stores (ferritin) are already significantly depleted. Ferritin is the storage form of iron, and a level below 30 ng/mL indicates depleted stores, while anything below 15 ng/mL indicates frank deficiency. Optimal ferritin for cognitive function appears to be in the range of 50-100 ng/mL. Iron supplementation should always be guided by ferritin testing, not haemoglobin alone, and excessive iron (from over-supplementation or haemochromatosis) carries its own serious risks including liver cirrhosis and increased infection risk through iron-dependent pathogen growth.

Iron Role in Brain Energy Metabolism

Iron is essential for brain function far beyond its role in haemoglobin and oxygen transport. The brain consumes approximately 20% of the body oxygen despite accounting for only 2% of body weight, and iron is critical in this energy metabolism — particularly in the electron transport chain within mitochondria, where iron-sulfur clusters are essential components of Complexes I, II, and III. Iron is also a cofactor for tyrosine hydroxylase, the rate-limiting enzyme in dopamine synthesis, and for ribonucleotide reductase, the enzyme required for DNA synthesis. These roles mean that iron deficiency — even without frank anaemia — can impair dopaminergic signalling, reduce neural energy production, and compromise myelin formation, with measurable effects on attention, memory, and executive function.

Why Iron Deficiency Is So Common

Iron deficiency is the most common nutritional deficiency worldwide, affecting an estimated 2 billion people. In menstruating women, iron deficiency is particularly prevalent due to monthly menstrual blood loss — even a “normal” menstrual iron loss of 30-40ml per cycle can gradually deplete iron stores over months to years. In men and post-menopausal women, iron deficiency should always be investigated as it can signal occult gastrointestinal blood loss. The symptoms of iron deficiency extend well beyond fatigue and pallor: restless legs syndrome (strongly associated with brain iron deficiency), impaired thermoregulation, reduced exercise tolerance, and cognitive impairment in both children and adults.

Iron Status: Not Just Haemoglobin

The standard diagnostic marker for iron deficiency is haemoglobin — but this misses the majority of iron-deficient people, because haemoglobin only falls after iron stores (ferritin) are already significantly depleted. Ferritin is the storage form of iron, and a level below 30 ng/mL indicates depleted stores, while anything below 15 ng/mL indicates frank deficiency. Optimal ferritin for cognitive function appears to be in the range of 50-100 ng/mL. Iron supplementation should always be guided by ferritin testing, not haemoglobin alone, and excessive iron (from over-supplementation or haemochromatosis) carries its own serious risks including liver cirrhosis and increased infection risk through iron-dependent pathogen growth.

A quality supplement routine can make a real difference to your results.

shop now — Neuro Serge

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