Why Probiotics Are Far More Complicated Than Most People Realise
Probiotics are not like taking a multivitamin.
Different strains can have very different effects, so some may support gut health and regulate inflammation, while others can worsen symptoms in sensitive people.
Most probiotics do not permanently colonise the gut. Long-term gut health is usually more about supporting the native microbiome through nutrition, prebiotics, lifestyle measures, and addressing underlying causes.
“Not All Probiotics Do the Same Thing”
“One of the biggest misconceptions around probiotics is that they are universally “good for gut health.”
Kate Troup Naturopath
Many people take them daily without really knowing:
But probiotics are highly specific.
Different strains can have completely different actions in the body.
Some strains may help regulate diarrhoea.
Others may support the gut lining.
Some may help regulate immune function.
Others may aggravate symptoms in sensitive individuals.
This is why probiotics should be selected based on the individual and the clinical goal, not simply because something is marketed as “good for the gut.
As the scientific literature repeatedly emphasises, probiotic effects are strain-specific and cannot be generalised across species or genera.
Why Strain Specificity Matters
Probiotics are classified in three levels:
Genus → Species → Strain
For example:
Lactobacillus → rhamnosus → GG
The full probiotic name is:
Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG
The strain is often the most important part.
That is because different strains within the same species can behave very differently in the body.
A good example is E. coli. Some strains of E. coli can cause severe food poisoning.
Yet another strain, E. coli Nissle 1917, has been used therapeutically as a probiotic and studied for supporting gut barrier function and inflammatory bowel conditions.
Same species. Completely different effects.
This is exactly how probiotics work.
Two probiotics may both contain “Lactobacillus rhamnosus,” yet behave completely differently depending on the strain used.
This is why broad statements like:
are scientifically inaccurate.
Probiotics Are Often Used for Specific Clinical Goals
In research settings, probiotics are typically studied for very specific purposes using very specific strains.
For example:
This is very different from the idea that everyone should simply take a broad probiotic indefinitely “for gut health.”
The strain matters. The dose matters. The timing matters. And the individual gut environment matters.
Histamine, Probiotics, and Reactive Guts
This becomes especially important in people with:
Some probiotic strains may contribute to histamine production.
Others may help regulate inflammation and support the gut barrier. And some may simply be too immunologically stimulating for an already reactive gut.
This is why some people feel significantly worse after starting probiotics.
This does not necessarily mean probiotics are “bad.”
It may simply mean the probiotic was the wrong strain, introduced too aggressively, or used before the gut environment was ready.
One of the Biggest Misunderstandings: Probiotics Usually Do Not Permanently Colonise the Gut
This surprises a lot of people.
Most probiotics do not permanently repopulate the gut microbiome.
“Probiotics can grow, metabolize and interact with resident microbes. Rarely do probiotics permanently colonize”
International Scientific Association for Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP)
Many are transient organisms, meaning they pass through the gastrointestinal tract temporarily while exerting effects along the way.
In some cases, they may help:
But once supplementation stops, many strains are no longer detectable in the microbiome within days to weeks.
This means probiotics are often better thought of as temporary functional support rather than permanent microbiome replacement.
So What Actually Helps Rebuild the Gut Microbiome?
This is where prebiotics become incredibly important.
If probiotics are like adding temporary workers into the ecosystem, prebiotics are more like fertiliser for the beneficial microbes that already belong there.
This is important because long-term microbiome resilience is less about continuously adding large numbers of external bacteria and more about creating an environment where beneficial native microbes can thrive.
Different prebiotics feed different organisms.
Examples include:
However, even prebiotics are not universally tolerated.
In people with SIBO, histamine intolerance, severe dysbiosis, or highly reactive guts, introducing prebiotics too aggressively can sometimes worsen symptoms initially.
This is why gut healing is rarely about blindly adding more supplements.
It is about understanding the individual ecosystem and supporting it appropriately.
Read more about prebiotics here: link to prebiotics blog
More Probiotics Is Not Always Better
The probiotic industry often promotes the idea that:
But clinically, this is often not true.
Probiotics can sometimes aggravate symptoms rather than improve them.
This does not necessarily mean probiotics are “bad.”
It simply means they are powerful biological tools that need to be used thoughtfully and individually.