May 9, 2023
Your microbiome is shaped by how you're born, how you live, the foods you eat, your medical history, lifestyle, age, and other risk factors. All of that will change your microbiome. - Raja Dhir
Raja Dhir, co-founder and co-CEO of Seed Health, joins Josh Trent on the Wellness + Wisdom podcast episode 547 to help you understand how important your bowel movement and excretion are in your everyday life and how synbiotics promote a healthy microbiome in your gut.
How do you maintain optimal gut health?
By the end of this episode, you'll understand how to recognize if your bowel movement is healthy, how synbiotics can help you optimize your microbiome, and why opportunistic organisms are a threat to your health.
For Gastrointestinal + Whole-body Health
2-in-1 capsule-in-capsule probiotic and prebiotic. Formulated for adults ages 18+ with 24 clinically and scientifically studied probiotic strains and a polyphenol-based prebiotic to support systemic health.
Clinically studied 2-in-1 powdered synbiotic, formulated for children and adolescents ages 3-17 with 9 probiotic strains and a fiber-based prebiotic.
Designed with how-do-I-get-my-kid-to-take-this-daily in mind.
"Because the microbiome is so unique people think that they need something individualized for them otherwise there's no hope of changing it. It's actually not true. It's a very dynamic ecosystem and it's highly personalized. There're dietary recommendations that would be the same for everyone." - Raja Dhir
"Everyone's optimizing for something else. Everyone has different methods and until everyone's looking at the same information set, using the same methods, it's really hard to compare the quality of different data sets. The better way to do it is to functionally understand what your microbiome is doing.
Is it making a lot of organic acids? Does it have a lot of organisms that have genes that we know are positive for fiber degradation or converting dietary nutrients or are inflammatory or help to rebuild the gut barrier? This is the level that we're at. We're looking at really clear features and trying to look at the prevalence of those features in different people vs their absence in others." - Raja Dhir
"Most people just learn over life to cope and assume that bowel movement an irregular, unpredictable, and even potentially something that requires force. You should have little to no strain, ease of expulsion, manageable to no amounts of persistent gas, you shouldn't have bloating, and you shouldn't have many sensitivities to diverse plant matters, especially roughage.
If you go through that simple checklist and then compare that to the Bristol stool chart, and see your stool quality coming out (the color, the shape, the texture, the hydration( those are your best indicators. Anything that you do beyond that is about optimizing. This is the day-to-day thing you should ask yourself because that's your first signal for how the whole system is functioning." - Raja Dhir
A life sciences
entrepreneur, Raja Dhir has unique expertise in translating
scientific research including scaling up both facultative and
strict anaerobic organisms. He leads R&D, academic
collaborations, manufacturing, technology development, and IP
strategy.
Together with Dr. Jacques Ravel, Raja chairs Seed’s Scientific Advisory Board—a group of globally-renowned scientists and doctors in the microbiome field. Raja has designed clinical trials with leading academic institutions including the teaching hospital of Harvard Medical School and the Trial Innovation Unit of Mass. General Hospital (MGH) is actively developing technologies with academic labs for the oral microbiome (Harvard) and skin microbiome (UCLA).
He also founded and oversees SeedLabs to develop novel applications for bacteria to solve complex ecological problems, most recently inventions to protect honeybee populations (Apis mellifera) from neonicotinoid pesticides and pathogen colonization.
Raja has negotiated multiple joint ventures, strategic partnerships, technology transfer, and licensing agreements with publicly traded companies (NYSE, LSE) and academic institutions (Harvard Medical School, NYU, UCLA), and serves on the Board of Directors for the Microbiome Therapeutics Innovation Group (MTIG), an organization that works directly with the FDA on the regulation of microbe-based therapies.
His work has been recognized in CNBC’s Upstart 100, TIME’s 2018 Best Inventions, Forbes, Fast Company, BBC, TechCrunch, Barron's, Xconomy, Boston Business Journal, and Business Insider.