The Journey Begins with your microbiome

Thanks for joining me!

This is a companion site to the analysis site at: https://microbiomeprescription.com/

The intent of this site to assist people with health issues that are, or could be, microbiome connected. There are MANY conditions known to have the severity being a function of the microbiome dysfunction, including Autism, Alzheimer’s, Anxiety and Depression. See this list of studies from the US National Library of Medicine. Individual symptoms like brain fog, anxiety and depression have strong statistical association to the microbiome. A few of them are listed here.

The base rule of the site is to avoid speculation, keep to facts from published studies and to facts from statistical analysis(with the source data available for those wish to replicate the results). Internet hearsay is avoid like the plague it is.

The Microbiome as a Key to Health

Continue reading “The Journey Begins with your microbiome”

Mathematically Derived Healthy Microbiome

This is derived from “Asymptomatic: No Health Issues” Odd-Ratio Model (See this post). These ranges should apply to any test. It applies to only bacteria that are reported by the test.

If you are interested in the mathematics see my prior posts.

Tax_NameTax_Rank(No column name)
Bacteroidota/Chlorobiota groupcladeAbove 10.6%ile
delta/epsilon subdivisionscladeAbove 9.4%ile
Bacteria candidate phylacladeAbove 54%ile
PVC groupcladeAbove 6.7%ile
FCB groupcladeAbove 10.6%ile
Terrabacteria groupcladeAbove 10.6%ile
Cyanobacteriota/Melainabacteria groupcladeAbove 13.5%ile
Methanomada groupcladeAbove 5.9%ile
BalneoliaclassAbove 49.4%ile
ChitinophagiaclassAbove 15%ile
DesulfobacteriaclassAbove 26.7%ile
CyanophyceaeclassAbove 12.3%ile
DesulfovibrioniaclassAbove 8.9%ile
IgnavibacteriaclassAbove 59.5%ile
CytophagiaclassAbove 15.8%ile
NegativicutesclassAbove 10.5%ile
LentisphaeriaclassAbove 25%ile
TissierelliaclassAbove 6.3%ile
BacteroidiaclassAbove 10.4%ile
VerrucomicrobiiaclassAbove 2.3%ile
FibrobacteriaclassAbove 1.1%ile
DehalococcoidiaclassAbove 8.9%ile
CaldilineaeclassAbove 4%ile
ErysipelotrichiaclassAbove 10.6%ile
HolophagaeclassAbove 3.4%ile
SynergistiaclassAbove 0.8%ile
AcidimicrobiiaclassAbove 2.1%ile
CoriobacteriiaclassAbove 10.3%ile
BacilliclassAbove 10.5%ile
FlavobacteriiaclassAbove 6.1%ile
SphingobacteriiaclassAbove 9.6%ile
MethanobacteriaclassAbove 5.9%ile
ClostridiaclassAbove 10.4%ile
GammaproteobacteriaclassAbove 9.4%ile
ActinomycetesclassAbove 10.6%ile
AlphaproteobacteriaclassAbove 5.7%ile
BetaproteobacteriaclassAbove 9.9%ile
DeltaproteobacteriaclassAbove 8.6%ile
MyxococciaclassAbove 1.6%ile
LysobacteraceaefamilyAbove 3.9%ile
BifidobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 7.7%ile
VeillonellaceaefamilyAbove 9.7%ile
ClostridiaceaefamilyAbove 10.5%ile
LactobacillaceaefamilyAbove 9.1%ile
HalomonadaceaefamilyAbove 5.3%ile
ActinomycetaceaefamilyAbove 5.2%ile
MycoplasmataceaefamilyAbove 8.3%ile
SpiroplasmataceaefamilyAbove 48.8%ile
AcholeplasmataceaefamilyAbove 9.6%ile
MethanobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 5.9%ile
StreptococcaceaefamilyAbove 10%ile
CorynebacteriaceaefamilyAbove 7.4%ile
MoraxellaceaefamilyAbove 0.8%ile
EnterobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 6.9%ile
PasteurellaceaefamilyAbove 3.9%ile
BacteroidaceaefamilyAbove 10.4%ile
ChromatiaceaefamilyAbove 4.5%ile
LachnospiraceaefamilyAbove 10.7%ile
PeptostreptococcaceaefamilyAbove 10.5%ile
EubacteriaceaefamilyAbove 3.7%ile
PeptococcaceaefamilyAbove 7.1%ile
unclassified ClostridialesfamilyAbove 49.8%ile
ThermoanaerobacteraceaefamilyAbove 2.7%ile
BacillaceaefamilyAbove 1.7%ile
PlanococcaceaefamilyAbove 15.8%ile
PaenibacillaceaefamilyAbove 3.1%ile
ThermoactinomycetaceaefamilyAbove 9.5%ile
PiscirickettsiaceaefamilyAbove 1.3%ile
RikenellaceaefamilyAbove 26.8%ile
PorphyromonadaceaefamilyAbove 7.4%ile
PrevotellaceaefamilyAbove 6.9%ile
unclassified BurkholderialesfamilyAbove 22.7%ile
CytophagaceaefamilyAbove 12.4%ile
ErysipelotrichaceaefamilyAbove 10.6%ile
PseudomonadaceaefamilyAbove 15.7%ile
AcidimicrobiaceaefamilyAbove 2.4%ile
NocardioidaceaefamilyAbove 18.2%ile
MicrobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 18.8%ile
SphingobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 9.8%ile
CoriobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 10.1%ile
SyntrophomonadaceaefamilyAbove 3.6%ile
HyphomonadaceaefamilyAbove 37.4%ile
RhodocyclaceaefamilyAbove 1.5%ile
EnterococcaceaefamilyAbove 1.4%ile
RhodospirillaceaefamilyAbove 4.1%ile
SphingomonadaceaefamilyAbove 12.2%ile
FlavobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 6.2%ile
HalobacteroidaceaefamilyAbove 36.6%ile
HolophagaceaefamilyAbove 3.3%ile
KiloniellaceaefamilyAbove 2.8%ile
Bacillales Family X. Incertae SedisfamilyAbove 10.2%ile
GemellaceaefamilyAbove 0.6%ile
RuminococcaceaefamilyAbove 11.1%ile
Eubacteriales Family XII. Incertae SedisfamilyAbove 2.6%ile
Eubacteriales Family XIII. Incertae SedisfamilyAbove 10.1%ile
MarinilabiliaceaefamilyAbove 57.3%ile
CyclobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 29%ile
ChitinophagaceaefamilyAbove 15.6%ile
CaldilineaceaefamilyAbove 4%ile
DesulfarculaceaefamilyAbove 23.8%ile
VictivallaceaefamilyAbove 35.8%ile
VerrucomicrobiaceaefamilyAbove 1.4%ile
DesulfovibrionaceaefamilyAbove 8.5%ile
DesulfomicrobiaceaefamilyAbove 9%ile
DesulfobacteraceaefamilyAbove 25.9%ile
OscillospiraceaefamilyAbove 10.4%ile
AkkermansiaceaefamilyAbove 3.5%ile
PeptoniphilaceaefamilyAbove 6.5%ile
EggerthellaceaefamilyAbove 10.1%ile
MelioribacteraceaefamilyAbove 71.4%ile
ProteinivoraceaefamilyAbove 4.2%ile
AcidaminococcaceaefamilyAbove 6.4%ile
ChristensenellaceaefamilyAbove 11.5%ile
SutterellaceaefamilyAbove 9.7%ile
DesulfurisporaceaefamilyAbove 11.3%ile
CoprobacillaceaefamilyAbove 5.6%ile
TuricibacteraceaefamilyAbove 6.8%ile
TepidimicrobiaceaefamilyAbove 48%ile
KribbellaceaefamilyAbove 2.6%ile
AzospirillaceaefamilyAbove 8.6%ile
RhodovibrionaceaefamilyAbove 17.8%ile
ThalassospiraceaefamilyAbove 19.6%ile
ThermohalobacteraceaefamilyAbove 80.4%ile
MetamycoplasmataceaefamilyAbove 1.9%ile
SpirosomataceaefamilyAbove 1.6%ile
DesulfitobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 11%ile
DesulfotomaculaceaefamilyAbove 1.9%ile
TissierellaceaefamilyAbove 34.5%ile
SporomusaceaefamilyAbove 6.7%ile
BalneolaceaefamilyAbove 49.5%ile
HungateiclostridiaceaefamilyAbove 5.6%ile
OdoribacteraceaefamilyAbove 8.7%ile
PectobacteriaceaefamilyAbove 25.9%ile
MorganellaceaefamilyAbove 20%ile
BarnesiellaceaefamilyAbove 24.7%ile
DysgonomonadaceaefamilyAbove 10.8%ile
TannerellaceaefamilyAbove 9.6%ile
DesulfofarcimengenusAbove 9.3%ile
DesulfohalotomaculumgenusAbove 35.9%ile
ClostridioidesgenusAbove 45.8%ile
HungateiclostridiumgenusAbove 37.3%ile
MediterraneibactergenusAbove 18%ile
SchaaliagenusAbove 6%ile
AnaerocolumnagenusAbove 66.8%ile
HathewayagenusAbove 11%ile
SegatellagenusAbove 15.4%ile
HoylesellagenusAbove 0.7%ile
LeyellagenusAbove 5.5%ile
ParacholeplasmagenusAbove 71.1%ile
OleidesulfovibriogenusAbove 54.4%ile
LimosilactobacillusgenusAbove 13.2%ile
ThomasclaveliagenusAbove 23.3%ile
ChristensenellagenusAbove 11.9%ile
PseudoflavonifractorgenusAbove 24.6%ile
MelioribactergenusAbove 73.3%ile
MurdochiellagenusAbove 34.1%ile
AlloprevotellagenusAbove 4.3%ile
FlavonifractorgenusAbove 31.8%ile
PhocaeicolagenusAbove 10.1%ile
CellulosilyticumgenusAbove 71.6%ile
RomboutsiagenusAbove 25.9%ile
TerrisporobactergenusAbove 32.4%ile
IntestinibactergenusAbove 41.9%ile
ErysipelatoclostridiumgenusAbove 34%ile
RuminiclostridiumgenusAbove 13.6%ile
BrassicibactergenusAbove 83.9%ile
FretibacteriumgenusAbove 13.3%ile
Candidatus SoleaferreagenusBelow 47.5%ile
KosakoniagenusAbove 14.3%ile
CoprobactergenusAbove 26.9%ile
IntestinimonasgenusAbove 30.4%ile
FusicatenibactergenusAbove 35.9%ile
AcetatifactorgenusBelow 52.3%ile
EisenbergiellagenusAbove 31.1%ile
AestuariispiragenusBelow 24.8%ile
DielmagenusAbove 23.1%ile
SenegalimassiliagenusAbove 26.6%ile
PeptoclostridiumgenusAbove 53.5%ile
HoldemanellagenusAbove 9.7%ile
EzakiellagenusAbove 44.4%ile
AminicellagenusBelow 30.1%ile
HungatellagenusAbove 66.5%ile
HerbinixgenusAbove 36.5%ile
FenollariagenusAbove 71.9%ile
PseudoscardoviagenusAbove 75.6%ile
CasaltellagenusAbove 49.4%ile
FaecalibacteriumgenusAbove 10.3%ile
AlistipesgenusAbove 29%ile
AkkermansiagenusAbove 3.1%ile
GemmigergenusBelow 45.3%ile
AnaerostipesgenusAbove 10.6%ile
AcetoanaerobiumgenusAbove 49.4%ile
DoreagenusAbove 10.7%ile
SedimentibactergenusAbove 2.8%ile
TuricibactergenusAbove 7.4%ile
MarvinbryantiagenusAbove 31.9%ile
EthanoligenensgenusAbove 25.8%ile
HespelliagenusAbove 27.1%ile
AnaerotruncusgenusAbove 10.8%ile
AnaerosporagenusAbove 54.1%ile
AcetanaerobacteriumgenusAbove 8.6%ile
OdoribactergenusAbove 8.7%ile
TepidimicrobiumgenusAbove 50%ile
OribacteriumgenusAbove 20.6%ile
SubdoligranulumgenusAbove 35.2%ile
GracilibactergenusAbove 77.7%ile
HenriciellagenusAbove 42.8%ile
OscillibactergenusAbove 29.1%ile
LactonifactorgenusAbove 30.5%ile
AdlercreutziagenusAbove 8.4%ile
PelosinusgenusAbove 36.2%ile
ParabacteroidesgenusAbove 9.7%ile
NiabellagenusAbove 18.1%ile
BarnesiellagenusAbove 21.5%ile
HowardellagenusAbove 6.6%ile
ProteiniborusgenusBelow 35.9%ile
MoryellagenusAbove 22.2%ile
DesulfurisporagenusAbove 11.3%ile
BlautiagenusAbove 10.7%ile
ButyricimonasgenusAbove 4.2%ile
ParasutterellagenusAbove 29.4%ile
EnterorhabdusgenusAbove 27.3%ile
RobinsoniellagenusAbove 8.4%ile
GordonibactergenusAbove 26.9%ile
AnaerosporobactergenusAbove 40.3%ile
PropioniferaxgenusBelow 52.3%ile
HoldemaniagenusAbove 8.2%ile
AcidaminobactergenusAbove 0.5%ile
HallellagenusAbove 1.4%ile
AnaerofilumgenusAbove 3.5%ile
PantoeagenusAbove 21.1%ile
PseudobutyrivibriogenusAbove 11.2%ile
AnaerobrancagenusAbove 1.2%ile
JohnsonellagenusAbove 13.6%ile
SutterellagenusAbove 6.9%ile
CatonellagenusAbove 17.5%ile
PaenibacillusgenusAbove 10.5%ile
CaloramatorgenusAbove 12.9%ile
FilifactorgenusAbove 7%ile
GeothrixgenusAbove 1.5%ile
SporobactergenusAbove 23.4%ile
WeissellagenusAbove 13.3%ile
FacklamiagenusAbove 60.7%ile
BrenneriagenusAbove 31.6%ile
SlackiagenusAbove 3.2%ile
EggerthellagenusAbove 1.6%ile
PedobactergenusAbove 3.6%ile
HalochromatiumgenusAbove 3%ile
MogibacteriumgenusAbove 1.8%ile
PapillibactergenusAbove 31.1%ile
CoprobacillusgenusAbove 1%ile
ThermicanusgenusAbove 9.8%ile
CollinsellagenusAbove 12.2%ile
OlsenellagenusAbove 26.9%ile
GranulicatellagenusAbove 6%ile
ParasporobacteriumgenusAbove 19.5%ile
OscillospiragenusAbove 10.7%ile
VictivallisgenusAbove 35.1%ile
AnaerococcusgenusAbove 10.1%ile
ThalassospiragenusAbove 17.9%ile
LachnobacteriumgenusAbove 14.5%ile
FinegoldiagenusAbove 10.6%ile
DysgonomonasgenusAbove 10.4%ile
PeptoniphilusgenusAbove 4.4%ile
VaribaculumgenusAbove 5.8%ile
KribbellagenusAbove 2.6%ile
PorphyromonasgenusAbove 4%ile
PrevotellagenusAbove 5.3%ile
SyntrophomonasgenusAbove 3%ile
DesulfovibriogenusAbove 4%ile
DesulfomicrobiumgenusAbove 9.5%ile
AcidaminococcusgenusAbove 7.3%ile
MegasphaeragenusAbove 3.9%ile
ShigellagenusAbove 42.9%ile
ButyrivibriogenusAbove 4.9%ile
RoseburiagenusAbove 10.5%ile
OxalobactergenusAbove 5%ile
BacteroidesgenusAbove 10.3%ile
HaemophilusgenusAbove 5.7%ile
KluyveragenusAbove 70.8%ile
ProteusgenusAbove 9.1%ile
AzospirillumgenusAbove 8.4%ile
CampylobactergenusAbove 0.7%ile
FlavobacteriumgenusAbove 40.1%ile
PseudomonasgenusAbove 15.7%ile
ActinomycesgenusAbove 6.9%ile
BifidobacteriumgenusAbove 8.1%ile
CorynebacteriumgenusAbove 6.9%ile
EubacteriumgenusAbove 0.9%ile
BacillusgenusAbove 4.8%ile
ClostridiumgenusAbove 10.5%ile
DesulfotomaculumgenusAbove 11.5%ile
SporosarcinagenusAbove 34.2%ile
LactobacillusgenusAbove 7%ile
ErysipelothrixgenusAbove 9.2%ile
StreptococcusgenusAbove 10%ile
RuminococcusgenusAbove 18.2%ile
GemellagenusAbove 0.7%ile
AtopobiumgenusAbove 1.6%ile
MethanobrevibactergenusAbove 3.3%ile
PeptococcusgenusAbove 4.5%ile
AcholeplasmagenusAbove 1.1%ile
SarcinagenusAbove 17.7%ile
SpiroplasmagenusAbove 49%ile
MycoplasmagenusAbove 4.9%ile
HalomonasgenusAbove 25%ile
SphingomonasgenusAbove 20.6%ile
LachnospiragenusAbove 9.6%ile
MicrobacteriumgenusAbove 1.3%ile
AcetobacteriumgenusAbove 5%ile
DialistergenusAbove 6.1%ile
AcetivibriogenusAbove 17.1%ile
BilophilagenusAbove 10.6%ile
AcetitomaculumgenusAbove 8.8%ile
VeillonellagenusAbove 7.5%ile
CoprococcusgenusAbove 18.3%ile
PhascolarctobacteriumgenusAbove 6.7%ile
Bacillota sensu stricto incertae sedisno rankAbove 64.6%ile
cellular organismsno rankAbove 1.3%ile
Bacteria incertae sedisno rankAbove 33.5%ile
Eubacteriales incertae sedisno rankAbove 8%ile
Oscillospiraceae incertae sedisno rankAbove 68.7%ile
Peptostreptococcaceae incertae sedisno rankAbove 4.4%ile
Tissierellia incertae sedisno rankAbove 11.6%ile
unclassified Streptococcusno rankAbove 81%ile
unclassified Alistipesno rankAbove 72.1%ile
unclassified Veillonellano rankAbove 87.9%ile
unclassified Peptoniphilusno rankAbove 73.6%ile
unclassified Bacteroidesno rankAbove 76.7%ile
unclassified Blautiano rankAbove 61.5%ile
unclassified Parabacteroidesno rankAbove 36.5%ile
ChitinophagalesorderAbove 15%ile
BalneolalesorderAbove 49.4%ile
AcidaminococcalesorderAbove 6.5%ile
VeillonellalesorderAbove 9.7%ile
MarinilabilialesorderAbove 45.9%ile
MycoplasmoidalesorderAbove 1.8%ile
HyphomonadalesorderAbove 42.3%ile
MoraxellalesorderAbove 0.8%ile
TissierellalesorderAbove 6.5%ile
CellvibrionalesorderAbove 9.7%ile
EggerthellalesorderAbove 10.1%ile
IgnavibacterialesorderAbove 60.3%ile
SelenomonadalesorderAbove 5.7%ile
CytophagalesorderAbove 15.8%ile
RhodospirillalesorderAbove 3.5%ile
RhodobacteralesorderAbove 25.9%ile
SphingomonadalesorderAbove 17.4%ile
FlavobacterialesorderAbove 5.9%ile
SphingobacterialesorderAbove 9.6%ile
DesulfovibrionalesorderAbove 8.9%ile
DesulfobacteralesorderAbove 26.9%ile
FibrobacteralesorderAbove 1.1%ile
VictivallalesorderAbove 25.9%ile
ErysipelotrichalesorderAbove 10.6%ile
HolophagalesorderAbove 3.3%ile
SynergistalesorderAbove 0.8%ile
CaldilinealesorderAbove 4%ile
DesulfarculalesorderAbove 24.3%ile
VerrucomicrobialesorderAbove 2.3%ile
HalanaerobialesorderAbove 21.5%ile
CoriobacterialesorderAbove 10.4%ile
BifidobacterialesorderAbove 7.7%ile
MycobacterialesorderAbove 4.3%ile
StreptosporangialesorderAbove 1.6%ile
AcidimicrobialesorderAbove 2.1%ile
ThiotrichalesorderAbove 1.8%ile
PseudomonadalesorderAbove 10%ile
ChromatialesorderAbove 8%ile
LysobacteralesorderAbove 7%ile
AlteromonadalesorderAbove 6.1%ile
AeromonadalesorderAbove 7.9%ile
PasteurellalesorderAbove 3.9%ile
BurkholderialesorderAbove 9.8%ile
EnterobacteralesorderAbove 6.1%ile
BacteroidalesorderAbove 10.4%ile
EubacterialesorderAbove 10.4%ile
EntomoplasmatalesorderAbove 13.1%ile
AcholeplasmatalesorderAbove 10.2%ile
LactobacillalesorderAbove 10.4%ile
OceanospirillalesorderAbove 11.5%ile
MycoplasmatalesorderAbove 12.4%ile
ActinomycetalesorderAbove 7%ile
MethanobacterialesorderAbove 5.9%ile
BacillalesorderAbove 6.2%ile
OscillatorialesorderAbove 17.5%ile
NostocalesorderAbove 2%ile
HyphomicrobialesorderAbove 8.3%ile
MyxococcalesorderAbove 1.8%ile
BacteroidotaphylumAbove 10.4%ile
CyanobacteriotaphylumAbove 13.6%ile
PseudomonadotaphylumAbove 10.3%ile
BacillotaphylumAbove 10.5%ile
EuryarchaeotaphylumAbove 4.2%ile
Candidatus SaccharibacteriaphylumAbove 28.8%ile
VerrucomicrobiotaphylumAbove 6.3%ile
SynergistotaphylumAbove 0.8%ile
LentisphaerotaphylumAbove 24.1%ile
ChloroflexotaphylumAbove 11%ile
ThermodesulfobacteriotaphylumAbove 6.5%ile
ActinomycetotaphylumAbove 10.3%ile
IgnavibacteriotaphylumAbove 57.9%ile
MyxococcotaphylumAbove 1.6%ile
BalneolotaphylumAbove 42.4%ile
Melioribacter roseusspeciesAbove 65.1%ile
Fusicatenibacter saccharivoransspeciesAbove 33.2%ile
Intestinimonas butyriciproducensspeciesAbove 8.4%ile
Ruminococcus champanellensisspeciesAbove 63.9%ile
Parabacteroides faecisspeciesAbove 59.4%ile
Dielma fastidiosaspeciesAbove 21.5%ile
Coprobacter fastidiosusspeciesAbove 21.4%ile
Tepidimicrobium xylanilyticumspeciesAbove 52.3%ile
Bacteroides reticulotermitisspeciesAbove 85.9%ile
Anaerostipes sp. 5_1_63FAAspeciesAbove 86.3%ile
Casaltella massiliensisspeciesAbove 51.8%ile
Anaerococcus provencensisspeciesAbove 26.2%ile
Blautia stercorisspeciesAbove 13.6%ile
Blautia faecisspeciesAbove 35.3%ile
[Lactobacillus] rogosaespeciesBelow 62.3%ile
Phocaeicola paurosaccharolyticusspeciesAbove 15.9%ile
Brassicibacter mesophilusspeciesAbove 80.3%ile
Gemmiger formicilisspeciesBelow 45.8%ile
Eisenbergiella tayispeciesAbove 30.1%ile
Dysgonomonas macrotermitisspeciesAbove 45.5%ile
Butyricimonas faecihominisspeciesAbove 31.8%ile
Aestuariispira insulaespeciesBelow 29.5%ile
Oleidesulfovibrio vietnamensisspeciesAbove 57%ile
Oribacterium sinusspeciesAbove 18.4%ile
Akkermansia muciniphilaspeciesAbove 3.9%ile
Dialister invisusspeciesAbove 1.3%ile
Bifidobacterium longumspeciesAbove 8.5%ile
Subdoligranulum variabilespeciesAbove 31.5%ile
Alistipes finegoldiispeciesAbove 28.7%ile
Phocaeicola massiliensisspeciesAbove 4.2%ile
Clostridium frigorisspeciesAbove 2.2%ile
Ethanoligenens harbinensespeciesAbove 49.2%ile
Bifidobacterium thermacidophilumspeciesAbove 20%ile
Bacteroides cellulosilyticusspeciesAbove 14.3%ile
Bacteroides helcogenesspeciesAbove 34.5%ile
Eubacterium coprostanoligenesspeciesAbove 82%ile
Anaerosporobacter mobilisspeciesAbove 31.2%ile
Acholeplasma hippikonspeciesAbove 6.2%ile
Desulfurispora thermophilaspeciesAbove 11.5%ile
Flavonifractor plautiispeciesAbove 29.5%ile
Gracilibacter thermotoleransspeciesAbove 77.2%ile
Mediterraneibacter glycyrrhizinilyticusspeciesBelow 27%ile
Oscillibacter valericigenesspeciesAbove 6.2%ile
Phocaeicola doreispeciesAbove 7.2%ile
Roseburia inulinivoransspeciesAbove 26.1%ile
Leyella stercoreaspeciesAbove 5.5%ile
Roseburia faecisspeciesAbove 8.4%ile
Dialister propionicifaciensspeciesAbove 25.3%ile
Phocaeicola plebeiusspeciesAbove 11.1%ile
Phocaeicola coprocolaspeciesAbove 14.8%ile
Bacteroides pyogenesspeciesAbove 78.9%ile
Acetivibrio alkalicellulosispeciesAbove 15.2%ile
Parabacteroides goldsteiniispeciesAbove 1.7%ile
Alistipes onderdonkiispeciesAbove 64.3%ile
Alistipes shahiispeciesAbove 26.4%ile
Bacteroides finegoldiispeciesAbove 7.9%ile
Lactonifactor longoviformisspeciesAbove 21%ile
Bacteroides graminisolvensspeciesAbove 11%ile
Barnesiella intestinihominisspeciesAbove 25.1%ile
Parasutterella excrementihominisspeciesAbove 29.4%ile
Porphyromonas bennonisspeciesAbove 6.8%ile
Butyricicoccus pullicaecorumspeciesBelow 66.3%ile
Alistipes sp. EBA6-25cl2speciesBelow 67.6%ile
Bacteroides sp. EBA5-17speciesBelow 82.8%ile
Aminicella lysinilyticaspeciesBelow 43.8%ile
Bacteroides sp. 2_2_4speciesAbove 59%ile
Gordonibacter pamelaeaespeciesAbove 29.5%ile
Bifidobacterium bombispeciesAbove 27.1%ile
Sutterella parvirubraspeciesAbove 14%ile
Segatella maculosaspeciesAbove 1.5%ile
Adlercreutzia equolifaciensspeciesAbove 6.1%ile
Blautia wexleraespeciesAbove 10.7%ile
Howardella ureilyticaspeciesAbove 4.9%ile
Niabella aurantiacaspeciesAbove 8.3%ile
[Bacteroides] pectinophilusspeciesAbove 58.7%ile
Phocaeicola coprophilusspeciesAbove 23.4%ile
Phocaeicola salanitronisspeciesAbove 11.8%ile
Bacteroides gallinarumspeciesAbove 13%ile
Pelosinus fermentansspeciesAbove 38.9%ile
Bacteroides xylanisolvensspeciesAbove 1.4%ile
Anaerostipes hadrusspeciesAbove 16%ile
Phocaeicola sartoriispeciesAbove 12.4%ile
Bacteroides faecisspeciesAbove 7.9%ile
Bacteroides rodentiumspeciesAbove 16.8%ile
Mediterraneibacter faecisspeciesBelow 41.2%ile
Bacteroides fluxusspeciesAbove 10.2%ile
Alistipes indistinctusspeciesAbove 18.1%ile
Slackia piriformisspeciesAbove 8.5%ile
Phascolarctobacterium succinatutensspeciesAbove 1.2%ile
Slackia isoflavoniconvertensspeciesAbove 12.8%ile
Blautia gluceraseaspeciesAbove 0.5%ile
Collinsella aerofaciensspeciesAbove 8.4%ile
Thomasclavelia cocleataspeciesBelow 52.6%ile
[Clostridium] methylpentosumspeciesAbove 82.7%ile
Segatella albensisspeciesAbove 21%ile
Bifidobacterium boumspeciesAbove 48.8%ile
Kluyvera georgianaspeciesAbove 68.1%ile
Paracholeplasma vitulispeciesAbove 72.7%ile
Eggerthella lentaspeciesAbove 4.8%ile
Bacteroides acidifaciensspeciesAbove 3.7%ile
[Ruminococcus] lactarisspeciesBelow 67.3%ile
Acidaminobacter hydrogenoformansspeciesAbove 0.5%ile
Lachnoclostridium phytofermentansspeciesAbove 50%ile
Holdemania filiformisspeciesAbove 34.5%ile
Anaerococcus octaviusspeciesAbove 11%ile
Desulfofarcimen acetoxidansspeciesAbove 15.8%ile
Parabacteroides merdaespeciesAbove 6.8%ile
Bacteroides stercorisspeciesAbove 2.1%ile
[Clostridium] viridespeciesAbove 53.5%ile
Bacteroides caccaespeciesAbove 9.5%ile
Sporobacter termitidisspeciesAbove 58%ile
Catonella morbispeciesAbove 7.6%ile
Succiniclasticum ruminisspeciesAbove 24.8%ile
Johnsonella ignavaspeciesAbove 9.9%ile
Clostridium putrefaciensspeciesAbove 33.3%ile
Anaerostipes caccaespeciesAbove 6%ile
Pseudoflavonifractor capillosusspeciesAbove 26.8%ile
Coprobacillus cateniformisspeciesAbove 7%ile
Catenibacterium mitsuokaispeciesAbove 9.7%ile
Dorea longicatenaspeciesAbove 32.1%ile
Blautia lutispeciesAbove 33.3%ile
[Clostridium] hylemonaespeciesAbove 68.2%ile
Coprococcus catusspeciesAbove 20.4%ile
Filifactor alocisspeciesAbove 16.4%ile
Lactobacillus inersspeciesAbove 13.9%ile
Segatella coprispeciesAbove 15%ile
Hungatella hathewayispeciesAbove 40.6%ile
Turicibacter sanguinisspeciesAbove 7.3%ile
Anaerotruncus colihominisspeciesAbove 3.8%ile
Roseburia intestinalisspeciesAbove 28.9%ile
Marvinbryantia formatexigensspeciesBelow 32.2%ile
Victivallis vadensisspeciesAbove 11.9%ile
Blautia schinkiispeciesAbove 12%ile
Robinsoniella peoriensisspeciesAbove 58.3%ile
Varibaculum cambriensespeciesAbove 29.4%ile
[Clostridium] cellulosispeciesAbove 65.3%ile
Caloramator fervidusspeciesAbove 5.4%ile
Alkalithermobacter thermoalcaliphilusspeciesAbove 8.3%ile
[Clostridium] scindensspeciesAbove 61.5%ile
Thomasclavelia spiroformisspeciesBelow 51.4%ile
Clostridium chartatabidumspeciesAbove 28.7%ile
[Clostridium] polysaccharolyticumspeciesBelow 17.3%ile
Gemella morbillorumspeciesAbove 23%ile
Lachnospira pectinoschizaspeciesAbove 7.2%ile
Bacteroides ovatusspeciesAbove 5.7%ile
Alistipes putredinisspeciesAbove 28.6%ile
Odoribacter splanchnicusspeciesAbove 29.6%ile
Prevotella corporisspeciesAbove 2.1%ile
Bifidobacterium animalisspeciesAbove 3.6%ile
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatumspeciesAbove 18.5%ile
Peptococcus nigerspeciesAbove 5.5%ile
Methanobrevibacter smithiispeciesAbove 3.4%ile
Ruminococcus bromiispeciesAbove 21.6%ile
Ruminococcus callidusspeciesAbove 14.7%ile
Blautia obeumspeciesAbove 18.8%ile
Bilophila wadsworthiaspeciesAbove 8.9%ile
Terrisporobacter glycolicusspeciesAbove 17.5%ile
Clostridium intestinalespeciesAbove 63.5%ile
Dorea formicigeneransspeciesAbove 10%ile
[Eubacterium] siraeumspeciesAbove 68.9%ile
Veillonella atypicaspeciesAbove 0%ile
Veillonella disparspeciesAbove 7.7%ile
Phascolarctobacterium faeciumspeciesAbove 5.8%ile
Peptoniphilus lacrimalisspeciesAbove 0.7%ile
Blautia productaspeciesAbove 20.9%ile
Anaerococcus vaginalisspeciesAbove 11.2%ile
Mediterraneibacter gnavusspeciesAbove 17.2%ile
[Ruminococcus] torquesspeciesAbove 21.6%ile
Coprococcus eutactusspeciesAbove 20.1%ile
Veillonella parvulaspeciesAbove 0.4%ile
Finegoldia magnaspeciesAbove 5.9%ile
Ruminococcus albusspeciesAbove 19.2%ile
Ruminococcus flavefaciensspeciesAbove 38.8%ile
Streptococcus sanguinisspeciesAbove 1.3%ile
Streptococcus thermophilusspeciesAbove 3.5%ile
Streptococcus parasanguinisspeciesAbove 9%ile
Blautia hanseniispeciesAbove 3.4%ile
Streptococcus anginosusspeciesAbove 10.5%ile
Enterococcus faecalisspeciesAbove 9.1%ile
Lactococcus lactisspeciesAbove 4.3%ile
Clostridioides difficilespeciesAbove 53.7%ile
Clostridium kluyverispeciesAbove 24.5%ile
[Clostridium] leptumspeciesAbove 74.7%ile
Thomasclavelia ramosaspeciesAbove 31%ile
Faecalispora sporosphaeroidesspeciesAbove 89.2%ile
Eubacterium oxidoreducensspeciesBelow 14.9%ile
Holdemanella biformisspeciesAbove 10.1%ile
Eubacterium limosumspeciesAbove 1.3%ile
Propioniferax innocuaspeciesBelow 52%ile
Bifidobacterium indicumspeciesAbove 6.3%ile
Bifidobacterium magnumspeciesAbove 54%ile
Schaalia odontolyticaspeciesAbove 8%ile
Hoylesella loescheiispeciesAbove 6.2%ile
Butyrivibrio fibrisolvensspeciesAbove 61.2%ile
Oxalobacter formigenesspeciesAbove 4.5%ile
Faecalibacterium prausnitziispeciesAbove 9.9%ile
Proteus mirabilisspeciesAbove 11.1%ile
Haemophilus parainfluenzaespeciesAbove 5.5%ile
Aggregatibacter aphrophilusspeciesAbove 9.8%ile
Bacteroides fragilisspeciesAbove 6.1%ile
Bacteroides thetaiotaomicronspeciesAbove 9.2%ile
Bacteroides uniformisspeciesAbove 8.8%ile
Phocaeicola vulgatusspeciesAbove 9.3%ile
Parabacteroides distasonisspeciesAbove 9.4%ile
Lactobacillus casei groupspecies groupAbove 23.9%ile
Streptococcus anginosus groupspecies groupAbove 4.4%ile
OscillatoriophycideaesubclassAbove 6.3%ile
ArchaeasuperkingdomAbove 7%ile

(c) 2026 Lassesen Consulting, LLC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution‑NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY‑NC 4.0). Commercial use is prohibited without prior written permission. See https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

Generalized Odds Ratio to predict Symptoms from microbiome reports

Past analyses have explored the prediction of symptoms using odds ratios derived from populations that utilized the same microbiome test and data-processing pipeline. A colleague recently inquired whether percentile-based comparisons could potentially be applied across different microbiome testing platforms.

The core issue, as well documented in the literature, stems from a severe lack of standardization in microbiome data processing (See discussion here). This report presents results derived from all available data encompassing multiple test sources.

An important methodological concern arises from potential double-counting when odds ratios are calculated simultaneously for a strain, its parent species, and its broader taxonomic family. To address this, I apply odds ratios at distinct taxonomic ranks to ensure proper separation of these hierarchies.

A secondary consideration involves the subjective nature of symptom reporting. As symptoms are self-reported, respondents tend to record only the most severe experiences, resulting in an expected underreporting of minor or moderate symptoms. This introduces reporting bias that likely reduces overall agreement levels.

Forecast agreement with Report

The table below provides insight into which taxonomic ranks may be most predictive. It is truncated at a 10% agreement threshold for clarity.

RankPredictedAgreementPercentage
species subgroup1265543.7
subkingdom421740.5
superphylum112437933.7
superfamily218743820.0
infraclass66912618.8
cohort69213018.8
superorder103419318.7
suborder18539314717.0
subphylum8339137316.5
subfamily542483415.4
kingdom19385277914.3
strain28091385513.7
subspecies49169671413.7
species group1492911764611.8
superkingdom1142141251311.0

Reported with Forecast Odds < 1.0

Looking at symptoms reported where the odds was less than 1.0 (i.e. not elevated odds), we have a much shorter table. Looking at some ranks we see that we have around a 2:1 ratio between the tables, i.e. 66% (2/3)

species subgroup30723.3
superphylum178231117.5
subkingdom22313.6
suborder14242170712.0
subphylum754087211.6
infraclass7878510.8

Clinical Implications

A More Effective Intake Process

Using forecast results as an interview checklist for clinicians could significantly improve patient assessment. Early data suggest that approximately two-thirds of the checklist items will correspond to reported symptoms. Directly asking patients about specific symptoms is typically more reliable than relying on spontaneous disclosure, as individuals tend to report only their most severe issues.

Improved Identification of Symptom-Associated Bacteria

When a patient confirms the presence of a symptom, this information can be leveraged to identify bacterial taxa most likely contributing to it. This approach contrasts with the traditional method of labeling deviations greater than two standard deviations from the mean as problematic. Instead, it establishes distinct, data-driven thresholds, which sometimes produce counterintuitive but statistically supported findings.

SymptomNameTax_NameCritical PercentileOdds Ratio
Comorbid: Histamine or Mast Cell issuesCystobacterineae46.40.04
Comorbid: Histamine or Mast Cell issuesActinomycineae583.46
Comorbid: Histamine or Mast Cell issuesNannocystineae22.40.1
Sleep: Waking up early in the morning (e.g. 3 AM)Cystobacterineae54.25.33
Sleep: Waking up early in the morning (e.g. 3 AM)Nannocystineae22.40.13
Sleep: Waking up early in the morning (e.g. 3 AM)Coriobacterineae65.30.32
Post-exertional malaise: Next-day soreness after everyday activitiesSternorrhyncha31.90.11
Post-exertional malaise: Next-day soreness after everyday activitiesCystobacterineae10.68.49
Post-exertional malaise: Next-day soreness after everyday activitiesNannocystineae16.70.18

For example, in cases of post-exertional malaise (next-day soreness following ordinary activities):

  • Individuals above the 31st percentile for Sternorrhyncha have an 18% reduction in odds.
  • Those above the 16th percentile for Cystobacterineae experience an 849% increase in odds.
  • Individuals above the 16th percentile for Nannocystineae show an 11% reduction in odds.

These relationships indicate that increasing two bacterial groups (if their abundances are below threshold) and decreasing one (if above threshold) could normalize the microbiome toward a healthier state. For the other two conditions presented, the decision points cluster near the median rather than at the extremes, reinforcing that not all microbial influences occur at outlier levels.

Implications for Generating Therapeutic Suggestions

To refine microbial intervention strategies, I employ the Monte Carlo method. In essence, multiple algorithms independently select bacterial targets and propose compensatory actions. The aggregate of these independent results identifies interventions with high consensus and robustness.

Furthermore, using different taxonomic ranks yields multiple independent bacterial subsets—ideal for Monte Carlo modeling—providing a more reliable foundation for therapeutic recommendation generation.

Caveat: The best odds-ratios are based by the same microbiome processing that is used for odds ratio. The intent of this was to see if reasonable results may be obtain at a generic level. IMHO, the answer is yes.

Try it yourself

I have exposed the data on this page. Just paste (or call by API) your data in the format shown. No charge. No limit on use of this Api.

The samples used for illustrations are obtained randomly from samples from a different lab (no data from this lab was used to compute the odds ratios) that are from “healthy individuals”. These samples tend to have the top symptom being “Asymptomatic: No Health Issues” which is consistent with the claim of “healthy individuals”.

  • Freq: Is the number of taxonomic ranks that predicted this symptom
  • Estimate: Indicates the magnitude of the prediction.

Email me at Research@MicrobiomePrescription.com with comments and opinions.

Accurate Inference from Studies on the Microbiome

My exploration of microbiome modification began with reading studies archived in the U.S. National Library of Medicine. As someone who has been developing expert systems since the 1990s, my instinct was to encode the findings from these studies as facts within an expert system—letting logic determine the optimal course of action.

In artificial intelligence (AI), an expert system is a computer system emulating the decision-making ability of a human expert. Expert systems are designed to solve complex problems by reasoning through bodies of knowledge, represented mainly as if–then rules rather than through conventional procedural programming code — Wikipedia

Some Difficult Discoveries

As I built the knowledge base, some major problems quickly emerged:

  • Results from different studies often contradicted one another.
  • Some results were replicated consistently, while others produced conflicting outcomes.
  • Certain findings were reported only once and never replicated.
  • There was significant uncertainty about bacterial identification due to non-standardized testing methods (see this explanation).
  • Studies tended to report results at a single taxonomy rank—often not the rank relevant to my analysis.

To address the first issue, I incorporated fuzzy logic into the expert system, allowing it to handle ambiguity and partial truths rather than rigid yes/no classifications.

Fuzzy logic is based on the observation that people make decisions based on imprecise and non-numerical information. Fuzzy models or fuzzy sets are mathematical means of representing vagueness and imprecise information (hence the term fuzzy). These models have the capability of recognising, representing, manipulating, interpreting, and using data and information that are vague and lack certainty. — Wikipedia

The second issue required a different approach. I began using bacterial association data (available here) to infer relationships between taxa. For example, if a compound influenced the genus Bifidobacterium, I could reasonably infer a similar effect for its species. This two-way relationship also works in reverse: if you want to increase Bifidobacterium overall, the species Bifidobacterium longum—a readily available probiotic—shows the strongest positive association.

Species NameEstimate Percentage Inference
Bifidobacterium actinocoloniiforme18.8
Bifidobacterium adolescentis54.8
Bifidobacterium angulatum26.6
Bifidobacterium animalis14.5
Bifidobacterium asteroides40.2
Bifidobacterium avesanii34.2
Bifidobacterium bifidum25.5
Bifidobacterium bohemicum52.7
Bifidobacterium bombi57.7
Bifidobacterium boum64.1
Bifidobacterium breve52.4
Bifidobacterium catenulatum33.9
Bifidobacterium choerinum66.6
Bifidobacterium commune45.4
Bifidobacterium cuniculi21.8
Bifidobacterium dentium23.2
Bifidobacterium gallicum30.8
Bifidobacterium indicum52.9
Bifidobacterium lemurum50.4
Bifidobacterium longum73.7
Bifidobacterium magnum62.5
Bifidobacterium minimum27.5
Bifidobacterium mongoliense31.9
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum31.2
Bifidobacterium pullorum30.2
Bifidobacterium ruminantium20.4
Bifidobacterium scardovii16.9
Bifidobacterium subtile38.8
Bifidobacterium thermacidophilum44.5
Bifidobacterium thermophilum29.8
Bifidobacterium tsurumiense11.7

With fuzzy logic, study findings indicating increases or decreases could be translated into numerical values. Using bacterial association data, I could then adjust those values to create a more accurate estimate of impact.

Why Do the Mathematics?

Modern AI models, particularly Large Language Models (LLMs), operate differently. They generate responses by finding text that resembles the question rather than reasoning from factual relationships. LLMs do not distinguish whether data comes from a single study or many, nor do they analyze hierarchical relationships within bacterial taxonomy. As a result, taxonomic nuances—such as the difference between Lactobacillus reuteri and Limosilactobacillus reuteri—are often overlooked because the evolution of bacterial naming conventions is ignored.

At the other end of the treatment spectrum is a “whole health” influencer who might recall a single study about Bifidobacterium dentium and use it to infer a complete treatment plan. My approach is simpler: I prefer actions grounded in probability—ones that have the best odds of success.

This is a bit of the engine used on my free site for individuals, Microbiome Prescription. At present we have 14,388,582 million facts over 1,882 modifiers.

Designing Clinical Trials using Metabolite Shifts

Recently on my Microbiome Sites I added a table of metabolites whose presence or absence is associated with various symptoms. Technical details is give in this post: Metabolites and Symptoms. The volume of data is overwhelming.

Today I realized that a good solution is to have the page frame a question that people can paste into their favorite AI.

These metabolites have been identified statistically: their levels, estimated from the microbiome, are abnormally low with P < 0.001 for people reporting this symptom pattern (for example, ME/CFS without IBS). They are hypothesis-generating signals only and have not been validated in clinical trials. In my opinion, they highlight candidates that could be explored in formal clinical research or cautiously by an experienced physician with individual patients. None of these AI-assisted suggestions should be used without review and approval by an appropriate medical professional.

For example ME/CFS without IBS link as an example or to look at other symptoms go to that page and change the drop down. In terms of PROBIOTIC TRIALS, you want to see which of these substances are produced by bacteria.

Instead of “Are any of the following available as supplements or prescriptible from MDs:” ask,
“Are any of the following available produced by species uses as probiotics” or more explicit “According to KEGG are any produced by lactobacillus species”

Perplexity Response


None of the listed KEGG compounds appear to be commonly prescribable by MDs as pharmaceuticals. A few are available or derivable as dietary supplements, primarily those related to natural pigments and vitamins found in plants or bacteria.

Available Supplements

Chlorophyll a (KEGG: C05306) is widely sold as a supplement in forms like chlorophyllin for odor control, detoxification, and general health support, often derived from alfalfa or algae.

Ectoine (KEGG: C06231) is offered in over-the-counter supplements, eye drops, and skincare for dry eye relief, skin protection, and anti-inflammatory effects.

Vitamin E Forms

Alpha-tocopherol (KEGG: C02477), beta-tocopherol (KEGG: C14152), alpha-tocotrienol (KEGG: C14153), and beta-tocotrienol (KEGG: C14154) are standard vitamin E components available in tocopherol/tocotrienol supplements for antioxidant and cardiovascular support.

Unavailable Compounds

All others, including bacteriochlorophylls (e.g., C11242, C18155, C21217), complex lipids, CoA derivatives, and specialized bacterial metabolites like archaeal lipids or mycothiol conjugates, show no evidence of commercial supplements or prescriptions; they remain research or biochemical intermediates.

Claude AI Response

Based on my research, I can provide you with information about which compounds from your list are available as supplements or prescribable by physicians. Here’s a summary:

Compounds Available as Supplements:

Chlorophyll a – Available as dietary supplements, typically sold as “chlorophyllin” (a water-soluble derivative with copper instead of magnesium). Available in liquid drops, capsules, and tablets at most health food stores and drug stores WebMDWebMD.

Arachidonate (Arachidonic acid) – Marketed as a dietary supplement, particularly for bodybuilding and muscle growth Wikipedia. Available over-the-counter in capsule form.

Raffinose – Not typically taken as a standalone supplement, though it occurs naturally in foods and may have prebiotic properties Nutrients ReviewWikipedia. Used primarily in research and cryopreservation applications.

Alpha-Tocopherol (Vitamin E) – Widely available as a dietary supplement in capsule, gel capsule, and liquid forms, and can also be prescribed by doctors for certain conditions MedlinePlusWikipedia. In 2023, it was the 290th most commonly prescribed medication in the United States Wikipedia.

Beta-Tocopherol, Alpha-Tocotrienol, Beta-Tocotrienol – Available in mixed vitamin E supplements containing various tocopherols and tocotrienols.

Compounds with Medical/Prescribable Uses:

Bilirubin – Not available as a supplement. Medications like phenobarbital can be prescribed to reduce bilirubin levels in conditions like Crigler-Najjar syndrome and Gilbert’s syndrome Medscape, but bilirubin itself is not supplemented.

D-Xylose – Used primarily as a diagnostic tool in medical testing for malabsorption.

Important Notes:

The vast majority of the compounds on your list are:

  • Biochemical intermediates in metabolic pathways
  • Research chemicals
  • Bacterial/plant-specific compounds
  • Not available as supplements or prescription medications

Only a very small number (primarily the vitamin E forms, chlorophyll, and arachidonic acid) are commercially available as dietary supplements. I’m not a medical professional, so if you’re considering any of these supplements for health purposes, please consult with a healthcare provider.

This is intended for MD and Researchers

None of the listed KEGG compounds have robust clinical trial validation for therapeutic use. They represent microbiome-derived metabolites with statistically low levels (P < 0.001), suggesting potential biological roles worth exploring in formal trials or under MD supervision.

Key Caveat

Always consult a medical professional before trying any supplement or intervention based on these findings. AI suggestions are not medical advice.

Metabolites and Symptoms

In recent discussions with microbiome startup teams, a key question emerged: which metabolites correlate with specific symptoms? I recommended odds ratios as the optimal analytical approach, and one team is now considering integrating this into their product.

My prior analysis of KEGG-derived metabolite data from various labs revealed stronger consistency in metabolite patterns than bacterial profiles. Symptoms likely arise from adverse metabolite combinations circulating systemically—one metabolite can stem from hundreds of bacteria, and one bacterium can influence hundreds of metabolites—creating a complex web akin to an oversized Gordian knot.

Humans naturally gravitate toward simple “sound bites.” Asked for the highest odds of criminality, people might cite race, city neighborhood, or age range (with 0-5-year-olds showing near-zero risk). True predictive power comes from aggregating all statistically significant odds ratios—in this case, all reported metabolites with meaningful associations.

Using 4500 symptom-annotated samples from BiomeSight, this post explores that approach.

Go to Site

Computing the Odds Ratio

The process is simple:

  • Take the Biomesight samples and compute the different metabolites using the KEGG: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes data.
    • This produced 2,690 different metabolites
  • Convert the amount for each metabolite to Percentile ranking. This allows the results to be applied to other pipeline data that may produce different values.
  • Compute the Chi2 for each integer Percentile rank(100) for each metabolite and symptom (with at least 30 reports, i.e. 207)
    • 2,690 x 100 x 207 = 55,683,000 Chi2 computations
  • Take the most significant vector with P < 0.001 or Chi2 > 10.83.
    • Then compute the odds ratio for it

The calculations were brutal with the CPU pegged for days (with some overclocking). If you are running on a cloud service, I trust you have a fat bitcoin wallet.

The results were over 585,094 significant metabolites for our 207 symptoms, or about 1% of the cases has a significant association found.

Using Odds Ratios

Human nature likes simplicity. “Give me just one factor to determine if a person is likely an illegal resident in the USA.” A 2025 report cites there are 150,000 illegal Irish citizens in the US, why is an Irish accent not used as a flag by a certain paramilitary group? With the microbiome data, we suffer a similar bias for simplicity with exclusion of inconvenient facts.

Looking at the odds ratios in detail, we may see large numbers. We should avoid using just one numberin isolation. The table for General: Fatigue is below. For example for the first two, metabolites if one is above and one is below, the resulting Odds ratio is about 1.09 (62.60 * 0.0174), i.e. no major risk. In short all available metabolites should be used, not just one or two.

CompoundNamePercentileOdds Ratio AboveOdds Ratio Below
Pseudouridine 5′-phosphate3962.600.0160
N-Acetylmuramic acid 6-phosphate3757.320.0174
Uridine4374.510.0134
1-(5′-Phosphoribosyl)-5-amino-4-imidazolecarboxamide3484.220.0119
GDP-4-amino-4,6-dideoxy-alpha-D-mannose40109.800.0091
beta-L-Arabinofuranose290.621.6092

There is another interesting pattern that arise. Every metabolite is most significant for being present or ot present. This is a natural pattern to use for various machine learning and AI methods, for example

  • Logistic Regression: Outputs probabilities for binary decisions via sigmoid.
  • Support Vector Machines (SVM): Finds hyperplanes separating binary classes.
  • Decision Trees: Splits data into binary paths leading to class labels.
  • Naive Bayes: Probabilistic classifier assuming feature independence for binary outcomes.
  • Perceptrons: Single-layer neural nets for linearly separable binary problems.
  • Random Forests: Ensemble of trees voting on binary predictions

Clinical Use No, Research Use Yes

With a few exceptions, clinical use is limited. For most metabolites there are no easy ways to explicitly, safely, increase or decrease it.

One interesting exception was for C06570: Tetracycline. If this is not seen, then with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS), the odds of having it is 22x higher. Tetracycline family of probiotics have had significant positive effects on ME/CFS patients. Other similar metabolites include:

  • Oxytetracycline (C06571)
  • Chlortetracycline (C11453)
  • ​Penicillin G (C06925)
  • Streptomycin (C04282)
  • Erythromycin (C06911)

In other words, detecting the absence of naturally occurring antibiotics in a patient with a matching symptom suggests specific antibiotics could be tried.

For items like probiotics, the impact is very strain specific. Very few probiotics are sold by strain (and those that do, often lack data). A simple example for Limosilactobacillus reuteri is illustrated below.

From prediction to function using evolutionary genomics: human-specific ecotypes of Lactobacillus reuteri have diverse probiotic functions[2014].

Technical Note

With bacteria Odds ratio I did a “double odds ratio”. A Double Odds ratio means:

  • Determining Odds ratio for Detected or Not Detected.
  • Determining the Optimal Odds Ratio when it is Detected.

This was done because I was focused on computing suggestions on individual samples.

These are coarse (single) odds tables because we are not evaluating individual samples but a collection of samples. It is very possible to do a double odds ratio for metabolites — but at present, it appears to have low utilization because of the extremely low number of possible interventions. If interested, contact me at Research at MicrobiomePrescription (US decimal point) com

Mast Cell Activation Syndrome Investigation

The reader with Multiple Chemistry Sensitivity(MCS) also has a diagnosed Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS). We will add this anchorite request. On the symptom list, I will be using a more generic :

  • Comorbid: Histamine or Mast Cell issues

The two earlier posts are here:

Not as Expected

After seeing results, I said to myself “This is NOT what I was expecting”. The first thing that I noted was that the number of significant bacteria was at 98%ile, i.e. 98 of 100 symptoms have less significant bacteria. There are a lot of bacteria that are statistically associated with this symptom!

What are we dealing with

Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (MCAS) is thought to stem from abnormally sensitive or dysregulated mast cells that release mediators too easily, often in response to everyday triggers, with genetics, immune dysregulation, and environmental factors all suspected contributors [2024]

My KISS model for symptoms that are statistically significant is that the metabolites (chemicals) released into the body have become unbalanced because the bacteria in the microbiome has become unbalanced. There are several thousands possible metabolites and we lack any in depth studies for the mixtures seen with MCAS.

Existing Common Treatments

All of these are reducing symptom severity and not curing the cause.

  1. Histamine blockade (H1 + H2 antihistamines)
    • Non‑sedating H1 blockers (e.g., cetirizine, loratadine) plus H2 blockers (e.g., famotidine) are widely used as first‑line and help a large proportion of patients by blocking a key mediator, histamine.
    • Doses are often higher and more frequent than standard allergy dosing, under medical supervision.
  2. Mast‑cell stabilizers
    • Cromolyn sodium (especially for GI symptoms) and ketotifen (dual mast‑cell stabilizer + H1 blocker) reduce mediator release and can markedly improve flushing, GI, and some neurologic symptoms over weeks to months.
    • These are usually added when antihistamines alone are insufficient.
  3. Targeted add‑ons (often leukotriene blockers or biologics) plus trigger control
    • Leukotriene receptor antagonists (e.g., montelukast) are commonly used to dampen mediator‑driven inflammation, especially in respiratory or systemic symptoms.
    • In more refractory or IgE‑linked cases, omalizumab (Xolair) is increasingly used off‑label and has helped some patients by reducing IgE‑mediated activation.
    • Systematic trigger identification and avoidance (food, temperature, chemicals, stress) is considered a core part of effective management in all major reviews.

Digging into our data

I am going to skip the explorations that I did in the earlier posts. As with prior post, Odds Ratio has better fine level identification. We also see a lot more bacteria are identified than with the prior two. There are several thousands possible metabolites and we lack any in depth studies for the mixtures seen with MCAS.

ClassicOdds Ratio
Bacteria Considered213298
Bacteria In Common5252
Species20108
Genus3376
Family5446
Order3634
Class2316

What about MCAS occurring with other symptoms? I just put a page up on the odds. Multiple Chemical Sensitivity is reported just 18% of the time, and light sensitivity at 37% of the time. There is not a strong association.

I did a comparison of the net Log(odd ratio) between people. A person without these issues is expected to have a Log(Odds Ratio) < 0. This Post Person reports moderate light sensitivity.

PersonLight SensitivityMCSMCAS
Last Post Person11.817.326.1
Anchorite5.716.413.8

Odds based Suggestions are now available

See this video on how to do it. The following suggestions were computed for the Anchorite. There were 24 bacteria deemed significant with Biomesight data, with the top high one being Mycobacterium

Probiotics to take and avoid

There are no really outstanding recommendations, but three are available and likely worth an experiment.

And the to-avoid list. Lactobacillus acidophilus implies that yogurt should be avoided.

The suggestions are based on studies from the US National Library of Medicine (PubMed). First, I should point out that Lactobacillus plantarum {L. plantarum} is not in the R2 list because there was not sufficient impact computed. PubMed data is less precise for multiple reasons.

The avoid list is almost 4x longer. I noticed that a lot of herbs and spices are listed as avoid.

Second Opinion using Ombre

The person had done testing with Ombre, then uploaded their FastQ files to Biomesight — so we have two different reports on the bacteria and the amounts. We also have two different sets of Odds Ratio — each is based on a specific testing lab. 101 bacteria were deemed significant with three being especially too high:

  • Lacrimispora sphenoides
  • Paucilactobacillus vaccinostercus
  • Oribacterium parvum

In this case, we had much stronger probiotic recommendations. Lactobacillus helveticus and Bacillus subtilis probiotics occurs on both.

We have similarity with to take suggestions. None of the probiotics suggested were on the above list; this is not unexpected because we are using data from the US National Library of Medicine (PubMed) that is a lot less precise and more fuzzy.

As always, when there is disagreement – go with items that there is agreement with.

The to avoid list is shorter here.

Summary

I discussed some of these finding with folks at PrecisionBiome.Eu and they pointed out that herbs are often avoided because of the belief that they contain histamines. An alternative explanation is that they shift the microbiome; in some cases, they may promote sudden cell death with a release of metabolites into the system (i.e. see Jarisch–Herxheimer reaction).

Why herbs are tricky in MCAS

  • MCAS mast cells are hypersensitive, and many different chemicals, including plant constituents, can trigger degranulation, especially in multi‑ingredient herbal mixes.
  • Case experience and MCAS guidance note that herbal and “natural” supplements can provoke flares (e.g., some antimicrobial herbs, moringa with high oxalates, concentrated essential oils), so they should be approached like medications, not “automatically safe” foods.

The algorithm that computed suggestions about things to avoid knows nothing about histamines. The calculations are done solely on the bacteria increases and decreases they cause.

This cause the following interpretation speculation of these results:

  • The likely cause is not enough of good bacteria to keep the bad ones in balance/control
    • The key word is “balance”
  • Unless a herb or spice is a strong recommendation, avoid them as much as is practical. There is the appearance that they contribute to inbalance.
    • The same may be said of antibiotics
  • Probiotics are unlikely to be a “cure all” with low benefit for most and adverse effects with others

Last item, remember the Microbiome Prescription suggestions are best efforts given the lack of standardization of microbiome tests reporting your results, the lack of standardization of microbiome tests used in published studies, etc. It is a fuzzy logic expert system.

If you have multiple samples, compute suggestions for each one and look for commonality. MCAS is a long duration symptom that persists across multiple samples. Increase your odds by looking for consensus in the To Take, and also aggregate the to avoid into a master list of avoids.

Multiple Chemistry Sensitivity Exploration

A reader with Multiple Chemistry Sensitivity(MCS) read my Light Sensitivity Exploration post and asked me to look at her sample because her MCS has been getting worse and she is hoping to slow and ideally reverse it. She does not want to become an anchorite with complete isolation from people. On her symptom list it is:

  • Comorbid: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
  • Mast Cell Activation Syndrome (Next Post)

Looking at Comorbidity from our contributed data

  • 14% of people with Photo Sensitivity have MCS, but 89% have MCAS/Histamine issues
  • 17% of people with MCAS/Histamine issues have MCS, but 51% have Photo Sensitivity
Photo SensitivityMCSMCAS
Photo Sensitivity42760383
MCS238135
MCAS753

I am going to skip the explorations that I did in the earlier post. As with prior post, Odds Ratio has better fine level identification.

ClassicOdds Ratio
Bacteria Considered85103
Bacteria In Common1715
Species637
Genus1635
Family2413
Order1710
Class104

Since Light Sensitivity and MCS tends to go hand in hand, I did a comparison of the net Log(odd ratio) between people. A person without these issues is expected to have a Log(Odds Ratio) < 0. This Post’s anchorite has moderate light sensitivity in reality.

PersonLight SensitivityMCS
Last Post Person11.817.3
Anchorite5.716.4

This feature is now available on the web site for samples from Biomesight, Ombre, Thorne and uBiome. How to get to it and use it is shown below.

Probiotics Suggestions for MCS

The full list is below (remember only probiotic bacteria reported by Biomesight are included). The list for the Last Post person for MCS was very similar.

Tax_nameImpact
Bifidobacterium longum2.22
Bifidobacterium adolescentis1.92
Enterococcus faecalis1.89
Bifidobacterium breve1.83
Clostridium butyricum1.78
Faecalibacterium prausnitzii1.73
Streptococcus thermophilus1.54
Bifidobacterium bifidum0.89
Bifidobacterium catenulatum0.8
Ruminobacter amylophilus0.55
Bifidobacterium animalis0.51
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum0.51
Enterococcus durans0.47
Lactobacillus johnsonii0.4
Leuconostoc mesenteroides0.33
Roseburia faecis0.32
Veillonella atypica0.23
Lacticaseibacillus paracasei0.2
Phocaeicola coprophilus0.18
Bacillus velezensis0.08
Lactobacillus acidophilus-0.05
Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron-0.23
Bacteroides uniformis-0.3
Limosilactobacillus reuteri-0.3
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens group-0.3
Lentilactobacillus parakefiri-0.31
Phocaeicola dorei-0.32
Bacillus subtilis group-0.32
Limosilactobacillus vaginalis-0.32
Enterococcus faecium-0.33
Bacillus subtilis-0.7
Lactobacillus helveticus-0.85
Lactobacillus jensenii-0.85
Pediococcus acidilactici-1.05

I should note that Pediococcus acidilactici is a high take for Light Sensitivity and a take for MCS for the light sensitive person. It is a to be avoided for the Anchorite in both cases. This goes back to the old saying “No probiotics can serve two people with the same symptoms” (Matt 6:24, Microbiome Translation).

Take Suggestions

These match the general pattern seen for Long COVID and ME/CFS

ModifierNetTakeAvoid
(2->1)-beta-D-fructofuranan {Inulin}1331374
dietary fiber8210625
oligosaccharides {oligosaccharides}789012
Slow digestible carbohydrates. {Low Glycemic}7710629
Fiber, total dietary699121
fruit608021
Lactobacillus plantarum {L. plantarum}506718
fruit/legume fibre486719
fructo-oligosaccharides48513
synthetic disaccharide derivative of lactose {Lactulose}46482
Human milk oligosaccharides (prebiotic, Holigos, Stachyose)38468
Cichorium intybus {Chicory}36393
wheat35406
Hordeum vulgare {Barley}344411
whole-grain diet334613
ß-glucan {Beta-Glucan}33385
High-fibre diet {Whole food diet}324816
Bovine Milk Products {Dairy}324613
resistant starch32408

Avoid Suggestions

We have a few herbs or spices showing up as an avoid. When we look at MCAS, we see a very atypical avoid list.

ModifierNetTakeAvoid
Ferrum {Iron Supplements}-26430
high-fat diets-15924
Ethyl alcohol {Grain alcohol}-8310
high red meat-708
 5,6-dihydro-9,10-dimethoxybenzo[g]-1,3-benzodioxolo[5,6-a]quinolizinium {Berberine}-71118
Nitrogen Oxide x Particulate Matter {Urban air pollutant}-628
High-protein diet {Atkins low-carbohydrate diet}-6410
vegetarians-6410
low fodmap diet-6815
Azadirachta indica {Neem}-404
Silver nanoparticles {Colloidal silver}-404

Summary

The new offering is easy to use, just follow the video above. Remember, most symptoms are caused by combinations of bacteria that alters the metabolites (chemicals) that the body gets. There are many distinct combinations that can produce a symptom. Above is NOT a general guidance, it shows the results for a specific person using their microbiome. The suggestions for your microbiome may be different. Testing is not optional if you want to make progress.

Light Sensitivity Exploration

This morning I got this email:

My daughter’s light sensitivity is now so bad, she’s screaming in pain at daylight  and won’t let her flatmate put up the blinds! Of course it’s related to her autism. Now we’ve uploaded her new sample, is there anything implicated in her current dysbiosis that might lessen this?
She is tormented by this..

I believe we just have enough data to get some traction. I will first use the new Odds Ratio because it give an objective measurement of the importance of each bacteria. Second, I will use the older methodology to simply get a second opinion of which bacteria (unfortunately, this does not indicate importance of each bacteria).

There are three symptom choices related. The difference in count is a reflection of when the symptom was added (the earliest one had the highest count).

  • Neurological-Vision: photophobia (Light Sensitivity) 431 samples
  • DePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Abnormal sensitivity to light 259 samples
  • Other:Light sensitivity (photophobia) 5

The sample above was done using biomesight and we have 148 different bacteria using Odds that are statistically significant for increasing or reducing the odds.

The Odds of her having light sensitivity is quite high: log(Odds)=11.8,

These notes document ongoing work on this issue. The goal is both to address her request and to deepen our understanding of how the MP classic method compares to the newer Odds Ratio approach. The MP classic method has produced good results so far, and Odds Ratios may further improve them. For details on how Odds Ratios are calculated, see this related post: Odds Ratio for the Microbiome 101.

In subsequent posts I will look at two symptoms that are very often seen with light sensisitivy:

  • Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
  • Mast Cell Activation Syndrome

Comparison of “MP Classic” and Odds Ratio Algorithms

Across all symptoms, using Biomesight data, we see consistent patterns in which bacterial levels are involved. The Odds Ratio analysis focuses on more specific bacterial taxa and is therefore more targeted. For example, instead of simply indicating low Lactobacillus, the Odds Ratio can highlight a particular species such as Lactobacillus reuteri. This higher resolution enables more precise selection of probiotics.

Taxonomy RankMP ClassicOdds Ratio
Species172713541
Genus513010040
Family84636158
Order58603269
Class36631437

Overview of all Samples

The list of bacteria that DOUBLES or more the odds when present in larger amounts

BacteriaRankOdds Ratio
Salidesulfovibriogenus5.9
Salidesulfovibrio brasiliensisspecies5.9
Ethanoligenensgenus4.9
Peptoniphilus lacrimalisspecies4.3
Slackia faecicanisspecies4.2
Collinsella tanakaeispecies3.8
Finegoldia magnaspecies3.5
Viviparoideasuperfamily3.5
Architaenioglossaorder3.5
Rivulariagenus3.5
Viviparidaefamily3.5
Rivularia atraspecies3.5
Rivulariagenus3.5
Finegoldiagenus3.4
Lysobactergenus3.4
Desulfovibrio fairfieldensisspecies3.3
Aerococcaceaefamily3.3
Anaerococcusgenus3.2
Streptococcus anginosusspecies3.1
Luteolibactergenus3
Luteolibacter algaespecies3
Anaerotruncus colihominisspecies3
Odoribacter denticanisspecies3
Filifactorgenus2.8
Lactobacillus gallinarumspecies2.8
Peptoniphilus asaccharolyticusspecies2.8
Selenomonas infelixspecies2.7
Corynebacterium striatumspecies2.7
Adlercreutzia equolifaciensspecies2.6
Streptococcus anginosus groupspecies group2.6
Glutamicibacter solispecies2.6
Anaerotruncusgenus2.5
Rubritaleaceaefamily2.5
Rubritaleagenus2.5
Gardnerellagenus2.4
Oscillatorialesorder2.3
Amedibacillus dolichusspecies2.3
Amedibacillusgenus2.3
Glutamicibactergenus2.2
Anaerococcus prevotiispecies2.2
Azospirillum palatumspecies2.2
Eggerthella sinensisspecies2.2
Sphingomonas abacispecies2.2
Alcanivoraxgenus2.1
Alcanivoracaceaefamily2.1
Haploplasmagenus2.1
Haploplasma cavigenitaliumspecies2.1
Isoalcanivoraxgenus2.1
Isoalcanivorax indicusspecies2.1
Oscillatoriaceaefamily2.1
Selenomonadalesorder2.1
Nisaea nitritireducensspecies2.1
Anaerococcus tetradiusspecies2.1
Selenomonadaceaefamily2.1
Lactobacillus acidophilusspecies2.1
Anaerococcus lactolyticusspecies2.1

On the other end, the bacteria that reduces the odds when present in higher amounts are:

Propionibacterialesorder0.1
Dyadobactergenus0.3
Herbaspirillum magnetovibriospecies0.3
Calditrichiaclass0.4
Calditrichalesorder0.4
Calditrichaceaefamily0.4
Caldithrixgenus0.4
Calditrichotaphylum0.4
Desulfitobacteriaceaefamily0.4
Bifidobacterium adolescentisspecies0.4
Bifidobacterium longumspecies0.4

In terms of probiotics, we see some quick observations: good and bad.

  • Two Lactobacillus probiotics significantly increases the odds — i.e. AVOID, especially yogurts!
  • Two Bifidobacterium species (and the genus as a whole) significantly decreases the odds — TAKE A LARGER DOSAGE.

Looking at this specific sample

We found no lactobacillus at all, and Bifidobacterium adolescentis is too low. Bifidobacterium longum was found but the amount was significant for reducing the risk.

Getting best probiotics via modelling

This is done using the Correlation Coefficient between bacteria from the R2 site (using the lab specific numbers). We focused solely on the bacteria that increased the odds significantly, and then compute the probiotics (based on only the species what Biomesight reports) that will shift them in the right direction.

Tax_nameImpact
Pediococcus acidilactici4.28
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens group3.89
Limosilactobacillus vaginalis2.95
Bifidobacterium2.5
Enterococcus faecalis1.73
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum1.6
Leuconostoc mesenteroides1.6
Heyndrickxia coagulans (bacillus coagulans)1.53
Bifidobacterium longum1.49
Clostridium butyricum1.46
Lacticaseibacillus paracasei1.35
Lactococcus lactis1.33
Bifidobacterium breve1.28
Lactobacillus helveticus1.27
Enterococcus faecium1.24
Bacillus subtilis group1.16
Lactiplantibacillus plantarum1.08
Bifidobacterium bifidum0.96
Bifidobacterium adolescentis0.84

Taking these same bacteria using the odds ratios and our usual suggestions engine, we get the following as the top suggestions.

ModifierNetTakeAvoid
Slow digestible carbohydrates. {Low Glycemic}375216
dietary fiber294516
Fiber, total dietary243814
fruit223412
fruit/legume fibre203212
(2->1)-beta-D-fructofuranan {Inulin}20233
High-fibre diet {Whole food diet}193213
oligosaccharides {oligosaccharides}19266
whole-grain diet18257
Lactobacillus plantarum {L. plantarum}172912
bifidobacterium15161
wheat12142

The Avoids. I noticed that Bofutsushosan is an avoid. This is a promoter of Akkermansia — which was on our avoid probiotics list. There appears to be reasonable consistency although we are using two different sources and mechanism to get these suggestions.

ModifierNetTakeAvoid
high-fat diets-8311
Ganoderma sichuanense {Reishi Mushroom}-516
Pulvis ledebouriellae compositae {Bofutsushosan}-405
2-aminoacetic acid {glycine}-404
Bacteriophages LH01,T4D,LL12,LL5 {PreforPro}-404
laminaria hyperborea {Cuvie}-404
low protein diet-416
D-glucose {Glucose}-416
Ferrum {Iron Supplements}-415
Ulmus rubra {slippery elm}-426
Honey {Honey }-426

Going Old School Suggestions

This is done the usual way but we temporarily clear all of the symptoms and then just marked this single symptom. We are wanting to focus solely on this one horrible symptom.

Clicking on this one symptom, we then get 10 bacteria associated

And also suggestions. I note some agreements between the methods:

  • Avoids: Honey, Ganoderma sichuanense {Reishi Mushroom},laminaria hyperborea {Cuvie}, etc
  • Takes: whole-grain diet, oligosaccharides
  • Disagreement: Bifidobacterium Longum – this gets interesting because the Odds Ratio indicate that the amount of Bifidobacterium Longum present was sufficient to reduce the odds to below 1.0

Summary

I generally favor a consensus of recommendations as the safest course. In this case, my impression is that using Odds Ratios leads to better identification of the bacteria involved (10 versus 24 for this sample), with the added benefit of indicating the relative importance of each bacterium. With Odds Ratios, the thresholds for being too high or too low are symptom-specific, rather than some magical universal cutoff that applies to all conditions.

Believing that there is one magic reference range for any bacteria is simply naive and ignoring the data.

I need to do some more refining of the code as well as enhancement to handle multiple symptoms concurrently; in time, this will be added to the sight.

Using Odds Ratio is now available on the site. The video below shows how to access it.

Technical Notes

Doing a low level comparison between the “classic forecast method” and the “Odds Ratio method I generated the table below. The Odds Ratio identified bacteria at a much more at a finer level (species) and most people would interpret that as being more targeted and likely better outcomes.

MeasureClassicOdds Ratio
Bacteria Considered115148
Bacteria in common2020
Species857
Genus2251
Family3321
Order2310
Class143

This also implies that only Genus and Species should be considered with Odds Ratio. Statistically this is preferred to reduce the amount of double counting.

Revisiting Suggestions using only Genus and Species with Odds Ratio

The R2 Probiotics are similar. Most probiotics are more challenging to obtain — see this page for known sources. The avoids are:

  • Lactobacillus johnsonii
  • Akkermansia muciniphila
  • Bacillus subtilis

Note: Pediococcus acidilactici and L.Plantarum (positive) mixtures is likely the easiest to obtain.

Tax_nameImpactPossible Source
Pediococcus acidilactici4.28Imagilin / NutriLots
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens group3.1only in big mixtures 🙁
Limosilactobacillus vaginalis1.79n/a
Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum1.6only in big mixtures 🙁
Leuconostoc mesenteroides1.6Bulk Probiotics / Leuconostoc Mesenteroides Probiotic Powder
Clostridium butyricum1.46Many sources
Lacticaseibacillus paracasei1.35danactive drink and many others
Lactococcus lactis1.33Bulk Probiotics / Lactococcus Lactis Probiotic Powder 
Bifidobacterium1.04

The To Take List

ModifierNetTakeAvoid
Slow digestible carbohydrates. {Low Glycemic}344712
dietary fiber294011
Fiber, total dietary233511
fruit203010
oligosaccharides {oligosaccharides}20244
High-fibre diet {Whole food diet}192910
fruit/legume fibre19289
whole-grain diet18245
(2->1)-beta-D-fructofuranan {Inulin}17181
bifidobacterium12120
Lactobacillus plantarum {L. plantarum}112211
wheat11121
3,3′,4′,5,7-pentahydroxyflavone {Quercetin}10111
Bovine Milk Products {Dairy}9134
Human milk oligosaccharides (prebiotic, Holigos, Stachyose)9101
polyphenols8124

The To Avoid List

high-fat diets-617
Honey {Honey }-516
Pulvis ledebouriellae compositae {Bofutsushosan}-405
2-aminoacetic acid {glycine}-404
laminaria hyperborea {Cuvie}-404
Vaccinium myrtillus {Bilberry}-404
D-glucose {Glucose}-416
Sodium Chloride {Salt}-415
Ferrum {Iron Supplements}-415
Ulmus rubra {slippery elm}-426
2-Amino-5-(carbamoylamino)pentanoic acid {Citrulline}-303
Lactotransferrin {Lactoferrin}-303
Sus domesticus {Pork}-303
Ganoderma sichuanense {Reishi Mushroom}-314
low protein diet-313
Theobroma cacao {Cacao}-325

Odds Ratio for the Microbiome 101

By Kenneth Lassesen, B.Sc.(Statistics), M.Sc.(Operations Research)

Odds Ratio and Chi2 are two sides of the same coin. The worth of this coin is far more than the fourrées seen with studies using averages.

The simplest case is how often is a specific bacteria reported with the control versus study groups. This is easy computed and can be placed in a table such as the one below

Control (without Symptom)Study (or with Symptom)
Bacteria Seen30090
Bacteria Not Seen600700

Just looking at the table, it is obvious that this bacteria is less likely to be seen in a study group. We can just drop these numbers in a page like this one, and get the results.

Converting to odds ratio is simple:

  • Compute odds for study group30090=3.33390300=3.333.
  • Compute odds for control group6007000.857700600≈0.857.
  • Odds ratioOR=3.3330.8573.89 that seeing this bacteria put you likely not in the study group
    • Or 1/3.89 = 0.257 if seeing this bacteria, places you in the study group

Second Tier: The amount

This is identical to the above, except there is a little mathematics needed to compute the best range of bacteria for odds ratio.

At 0.04%Control (without Symptom)Study (or with Symptom)
Above or Equal10060
Below20030

Again a simple computation with great statistical significant.

And again the Odds Ratio is calculated the same as above.

  • 100/60 = 1.66
  • 200/30 = 6.66
  • OR = 1.66 / 6.66 = 0.25 (or 4.00 for the reverse.

We have a tri-state odds ratio

  • Bacteria not seen: 0.257 of having symptom (i.e. bacteria is rarely seen with symptom)
  • Bacteria see but above or equals to 0.04%: 3.89 * 4 =15.56
  • Bacteria see but below 0.04%: 3.89 * .25 = 0.9725, almost no effect.

In this example, we used above or below 0.04%; we could have also used in the range (0.03 to 0.07) or not in the range.

Key points

  • Use only bacteria with P < 0.001 or better
    • Check Present or not Present
    • There is a finite enumeration of possible ranges when a bacteria present.
      • With today’s powerful computers, this is not a challenge
  • Check all bacteria that satisfies the minimum size constraint for the function used for the 2×2 table

For some symptoms we have:

  • over 450 bacteria with significant odds ratios for some conditions.
  • Highest Odds ratio over 92 for some bacteria

Performance

This data is based on self-declared symptoms from users. Often the symptoms entered are incomplete (some users had over 100 symptoms entered). While not rigorous, this appears to work for getting sample annotations entered in a citizen science context and for demonstration of the concept. There was enough consistency of data to get results.

The best news: The following had the Odds Ratio > 1.0, over a dozen in the sampling and agreement with entered symptoms.

SourceSymptomNameAccurate %
BiomeSightOfficial Diagnosis: Mood Disorders100
ThryveDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Frequently get words or numbers in the wrong order100
ThryveAutism: More Repetitive Movements100
ThryveAutonomic Manifestations: cardiac arrhythmias100
ThryveCondition: Acne100
ThryveDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Pain in Multiple Joints without Swelling or Redness100
ThryveDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Feeling like you have a temperature100
ThryveOfficial Diagnosis: Diabetes Type 1100
ThryveNeurological: Spatial instability and disorientation100
ThryveCondition: Type 1 Diabetes100
ThryveNeuroendocrine Manifestations: abnormal appetite100
BiomeSightAutonomic Manifestations: delayed postural hypotension100
ThryvePhysical: Long term antibiotics(over 6 months)100
ThryveComorbid: Electromagnetic Sensitivity (EMF)100
BiomeSightPhysical: Bad Air Quality100
BiomeSightNeuroendocrine Manifestations: marked diurnal fluctuation100
ThryvePhysical: Amalgam fillings100
BiomeSightComorbid: Reactive Hypoglicemia100
ThryveComorbid: Sugars cause sleep or cognitive issues100
BiomeSightOfficial Diagnosis: Dermatitis (all types)100
ThryvePhysical: Steps Per Day 2000-4000100
ThryveNeuroendocrine Manifestations: Painful menstrual periods100
ThryveGeneral: Anhedonia (inability to feel pleasure)100
BiomeSightVirus: Parvovirus positive (B19)100
BiomeSightBlood Type: FUT2 secretor100
ThryveOfficial Diagnosis: High Blood Pressure (Hypertension)100
ThryveDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Poor hand to eye coodination100
ThryveInfection: Coxsackie100
ThryveNeuroendocrine Manifestations: marked diurnal fluctuation100

Looking at the biggest sets. we see very good performance for some symptoms and poor performance for items like gender. Unrefreshing Sleep is interesting:

  • Unrefreshed sleep: 88.6% accurate
  • Unrefreshing Sleep, that is waking up feeling tired: 36.7% accurate

Is the cause, the fineness of definition (and lack of clarity by users entering) or some other issues?

SourceSymptom% CorrectSize
BiomeSightGeneral: Fatigue98.70317694
BiomeSightNeurocognitive: Brain Fog98.18182660
BiomeSightSleep: Unrefreshed sleep88.57616604
BiomeSightNeurocognitive: Difficulty paying attention for a long period of time75.54113462
BiomeSightImmune Manifestations: Bloating90.13761436
BiomeSightDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Fatigue85.96491399
BiomeSightGender: Male59.79644393
BiomeSightComorbid: Histamine or Mast Cell issues88.0102392
BiomeSightOfficial Diagnosis: COVID19 (Long Hauler)97.87798377
BiomeSightDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Unrefreshing Sleep, that is waking up feeling tired36.66667360
BiomeSightNeurocognitive: Can only focus on one thing at a time63.76404356
BiomeSightNeuroendocrine Manifestations: worsening of symptoms with stress.70.26239343
BiomeSightNeurological-Audio: Tinnitus (ringing in ear)60.71429336
BiomeSightNeurocognitive: Problems remembering things47.00599334
BiomeSightAge: 30-4097.14286315
BiomeSightDePaul University Fatigue Questionnaire : Post-exertional malaise, feeling worse after doing activities that require either physical or mental exertion92.33227313
BiomeSightNeurocognitive: Absent-mindedness or forgetfulness62.7907301
BiomeSightSleep: Daytime drowsiness69.33333300
BiomeSightPost-exertional malaise: General85.95318299
BiomeSightImmune Manifestations: Constipation83.22148298

Lab Performance

Identification by Age exhibits the reality of all labs are not equal. If Odds Ratios from the microbiome was not statistically significant for estimating age, we would see 14% for accuracy. We far exceed that.

LabSymptomAccuracySize
BiomeSightAge: 0-1086.229
OmbreAge: 0-1076.359
BiomeSightAge: 10-208025
OmbreAge: 10-2094.719
BiomeSightAge: 20-3058.5135
OmbreAge: 20-3064.734
BiomeSightAge: 30-4097.1315
OmbreAge: 30-4066.3104
BiomeSightAge: 40-5022.2203
OmbreAge: 40-5071.463
BiomeSightAge: 50-6029.7111
OmbreAge: 50-6061.747
BiomeSightAge: 60-7052.559
OmbreAge: 60-7018.183
BiomeSightAge: 70-809020

This difference of labs is seen with other symptoms — some of which has associations reported in the literature.

SourceSymptomNameRatioSize
BiomeSightGeneral: Depression67.7195
OmbreGeneral: Depression13.9108
BiomeSightGeneral: Fatigue98.7694
OmbreGeneral: Fatigue20.8149
BiomeSightGeneral: Headaches71.6197
OmbreGeneral: Headaches15.5103

Summary

The use of odds ratios provides statistically significant evidence for identifying probable symptoms. While not definitive—acknowledging that few diagnostic tests achieve complete certainty—the results demonstrate that both the selected testing method and its interpretation (for example, in relation to bacterial associations) materially influence diagnostic accuracy.

In clinical contexts, reliance on odds ratios offers greater methodological rigor than studies reporting merely “higher or lower levels of certain bacteria with P<0.05.” A notable clinical strength of this approach lies in its capacity to generate a structured list of potential symptoms for further inquiry, including those that patients may not have initially disclosed.

Nota Bene: It should be noted that the observed error rate is likely attributable, at least in part, to underreporting of symptoms. Patients often disclose only the symptoms they perceive as most severe, thereby introducing reporting bias into the dataset.

The table below shows the accuracy from 4 different labs. It is not a surprise that Shotgun data is more accurate than 16s tests.

SourceRatioSize
BiomeSight – 16s60.845069
Thorne – Shotgun80.7491
Ombre/Thryve – 16s40.817123
uBiome – 16s47.613071

Symptom Forecasts – 2 methods

I just pushed a new feature that is shown in the video below

The differences of the two methods are:

  • Old method looks at the level of bacteria that you have only. This is ideal for making suggestions because we want to alter what is there.
  • New, Odds Ratio method, looks at which bacteria were found (or missing) and their levels. Addressing missing bacteria is not trivial — unless it is a known probiotics species (99% are not)

Odds Ratio is likely more accurate because it considers what is there, the amount and what is missing. It is not an ideal choice for computing suggestions.

Remember Odds Ratios do not say you will have a symptom, it merely indicates increased odds of having the symptom.

Example below of two samples taken 5 years apart. Earlier sample, patient was 68, later sample 73. In general reflects well the symptoms reported.