Understanding the gut-brain axis and its role in anxiety, depression, stress, and mood instability.
When a client tells me they are anxious, my first question is rarely about their thoughts. It is about their digestion.
That surprises people. But once you understand the gut-brain axis, it makes complete sense.
The gut and brain are not separate systems that occasionally communicate. They are deeply integrated, continuously exchanging signals through a sophisticated network of nerves, hormones, and immune messengers. What happens in the gut shapes what happens in the brain, and vice versa.
This bidirectional relationship is one of the most important and most underappreciated insights in modern medicine.
“The gut is not just responding to your emotions. In many cases, it is generating them.”
Key Numbers
- 90% of serotonin is produced in the gut, not the brain
- More than 500 million neurons line the gastrointestinal tract
- Approximately 80% of vagus nerve signals travel from the gut to the brain, not the reverse
What Is the Gut-Brain Axis?
The gut-brain axis is a bidirectional communication network linking the enteric nervous system, sometimes called the “second brain,” with the central nervous system.
This network operates through four primary channels, each influencing mood, cognition, and emotional regulation in distinct ways:
Vagus Nerve
The vagus nerve is the primary highway between the gut and the brain. About 80% of its signals travel upward, from the gut to the brain, carrying information about the gut environment directly to emotional processing centers.
Neurotransmitters
Gut bacteria produce and regulate serotonin, dopamine, GABA, and acetylcholine, the same neurotransmitters that govern mood, motivation, and anxiety in the brain.
Immune Signals
Approximately 70–80% of the immune system lives in the gut. When gut inflammation occurs, cytokines, inflammatory messengers, can influence brain function and have been linked to depression and cognitive decline.
HPA Axis and Cortisol
The gut microbiome helps regulate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, the body’s primary stress response system. Dysbiosis can contribute to cortisol dysregulation, worsening anxiety, stress, and burnout.
How Gut Dysfunction Shows Up Emotionally
When the gut-brain connection is disrupted through dysbiosis, increased intestinal permeability (“leaky gut”), inflammation, or chronic stress, the effects are not confined to the digestive system.
They often show up as emotional and cognitive symptoms that are treated in isolation, without ever addressing the root cause.
Common Gut Symptoms
- Bloating and cramping
- Constipation or diarrhea
- Nausea and reflux
- Food sensitivities
- Appetite changes
Common Emotional and Cognitive Symptoms
- Anxiety and panic
- Depression and low mood
- Brain fog and poor focus
- Mood swings and irritability
- Burnout and fatigue
These two lists are not coincidental.
Research consistently shows that individuals with IBS experience significantly higher rates of anxiety and depression, and that improving gut health can positively influence mood and quality of life (Mayer et al., 2015).
The Stress Loop
Stress and the gut have a particularly destructive relationship.
Acute stress triggers the release of corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH), which can increase intestinal permeability, allowing unwanted substances to cross into the bloodstream. This contributes to systemic inflammation, which then signals back to the brain and can amplify anxiety and depression.
Chronic stress compounds the problem. It alters the composition of the gut microbiome, reduces microbial diversity, and suppresses the production of short-chain fatty acids that help maintain a healthy gut lining (Cryan et al., 2019).
In other words, stress damages the gut, and a damaged gut makes you more vulnerable to stress.
Breaking this cycle requires addressing both ends simultaneously.
The Serotonin Connection
Most people are surprised to learn that approximately 90% of the body’s serotonin, the neurotransmitter most associated with mood stability and well-being, is produced in the gut, not the brain (Yano et al., 2015).
Gut bacteria play a direct role in stimulating enterochromaffin cells to produce serotonin. When the microbiome is disrupted, serotonin production may be affected.
This helps explain why addressing gut health can be an important piece of a comprehensive approach to supporting mood and emotional wellness.
What This Means for Your Health
For clients presenting with anxiety, depression, burnout, or mood instability, I am always assessing gut health—not as an afterthought, but as a first-line investigation.
Functional stool testing, dietary history, stress patterns, and inflammation markers all help create a more complete picture.
When we restore gut integrity, reduce dysbiosis, and support the microbiome, emotional symptoms frequently shift, often significantly.
This is not about replacing mental health care. It is about expanding the lens so that we treat the whole person, not just the symptom that shows up most visibly.
If you are struggling with anxiety, low mood, brain fog, or burnout—and conventional approaches have not given you the answers you need—gut health may be a missing piece of the puzzle.
Reach out to start the conversation.
References
Cryan, J. F., et al. (2019). The microbiota-gut-brain axis. Physiological Reviews, 99(4), 1877–2013.
Mayer, E. A., Tillisch, K., & Gupta, A. (2015). Gut/brain axis and the microbiota. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 125(3), 926–938.
Yano, J. M., et al. (2015). Indigenous bacteria from the gut microbiota regulate host serotonin biosynthesis. Cell, 161(2), 264–276.
Foster, J. A., & McVey Neufeld, K. A. (2013). Gut-brain axis: how the microbiome influences anxiety and depression. Trends in Neurosciences, 36(5), 305–312.


