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Healthy Home Economist / Archives / Natural Remedies / Choosing the Best Probiotic by Type

Choosing the Best Probiotic by Type

by Sarah Pope / Affiliate Links ✔

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Basic Questions to Answer
  • Fermented Foods versus Probiotics Supplements
  • Analyzing a Probiotic Label
  • Is Refrigeration a Sign of Quality?
  • How Much to Take
  • Probiotics When Traveling
  • Help! My Probiotic is Making Me Sick!
  • Best Brands (re-vetted)

How to analyze a probiotic brand to determine if it contains the best and most appropriate strength and variety of strains necessary for therapeutic benefit to improve gut function.

different types of the best probiotics on white plate

The number of probiotic supplements on the market is nothing short of staggering!

This reflects their huge importance to our health and immunity especially if we have taken a round of antibiotics or other gut flora-altering meds like the Pill.

The fact is that the bacteria living in and on your body outnumber human cells according to the Microbiome Institute. (1)

It is clear that selecting the best probiotic supplement to support and sustain this beneficial microbial activity working synergistically with your biological systems is a critical decision.

Basic Questions to Answer

How to choose the best probiotic supplement for your particular situation?

Which strains are best and most effective for your particular health challenges?

Are soil-based probiotics important and safe?

Do particular strains really even matter?

Is refrigeration important?

While specific strains have been studied for certain therapeutic applications, generally it is best to make sure the probiotic you choose contains a variety of beneficial microbial species from each of four main categories:

  • Lactobacillus (lactic acid bacteria)
  • Bifidobacteria
  • Soil-based organisms (SBOs)
  • Beneficial yeasts (anti-candida)

Your strategy toward choosing a probiotic should ideally include all four of these categories for optimal health effects if your diet contains no fermented foods.

What if you do eat cultured food regularly? In that case, you probably still need a probiotic.

Let’s look at this more in-depth.

Fermented Foods versus Probiotics Supplements

Some people may be under the impression that if they eat fermented foods, then they don’t need a probiotic supplement.

This commonly held view is both true and false.

The reason is that different probiotic foods contain different strains from the four categories above.

**I don’t know of a single cultured food that contains one or more strains from all four types!

Thus, if you eat sauerkraut and drink kombucha, you will still need a probiotic.

This is because sauerkraut and kombucha only contain probiotics from the first category above (Lactobacillus or lactic acid bacteria).

These fermented foods don’t contain any Bifidobacteria, soil-based microbes (that aggressively recolonize the gut and eliminate pathogenic strains), or beneficial yeasts (that combat candida).

If you add homemade kefir made with live grains to the home menu, then you have the beneficial yeasts and bifidobacteria categories covered.

If you include natto, which contains the soil based microbe Bacillus subtlis, you now have all four categories of important beneficial microbes in your diet.

Very few people I’ve come across even if eating a fully traditional diet get all the types of beneficial microbes they need for optimal gut health.

Thus, it is a good idea to have a safe, effective probiotic brand to fill in the gaps.

Let’s go over how to find a good probiotic by reading labels.

Analyzing a Probiotic Label

Once you have zeroed in on a few brands that contain all of the above, be sure to note that the best probiotic supplement companies list on the bottle the genus (i.e. Lactobacillus) species (i.e. acidophilus) and strain (i.e. DDS-1) of each beneficial microbe included in the probiotic.

If the brand you are considering does not list bacterial strains on the bottle, then a phone call to the company is necessary to learn more.

If the company doesn’t know or won’t tell you, then it is wise to choose another brand.

A recent and worrisome occurrence in the probiotic industry is the widespread use of lab-created probiotic strains that are patented as intellectual property (this means they are not 100% natural).

Avoid these probiotic brands like the plague!

You do not want your gut colonized by synthetic microbes with unknown long-term health effects.

Is Refrigeration a Sign of Quality?

According to Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, the best probiotic supplements do not need to be refrigerated and can be stored at room temperature.  

This means that the bacterial strains are hardy and the product is high quality to withstand the warmth and enzymatic activity of the digestive process.

How Much to Take

When working on a health issue it is important to work up to a therapeutic dose. Based on age, a therapeutic dose would consist of the following:

  • Infant up to 12 months – 1-2 billion bacterial cells per day
  • Toddlers from 1 to 2 years – 2-4 billion bacterial cells per day
  • Children from 2 to 4 years – 4-8 billion bacterial cells per day
  • Children from 4 to 10 years – 8-12 billion bacterial cells per day
  • Adolescents from 12 to 16 years – 12-15 billion per day
  • Adults should have around 15-20+ billion bacterial cells per day

A therapeutic, age-appropriate dose should be maintained for an average of 6 months to overtake harmful microbes and reestablish beneficial microbes.

Following a clean, whole foods diet is essential during this time. 

If you continue feeding your pathogens in the gut with sugar and processed carbohydrates then the probiotics will not have much chance of helping you.

After six months it’s beneficial to reduce to a maintenance dose of probiotics and/or consume a variety of fermented foods daily that contain strains from all four probiotic types.

A maintenance dose would be half the therapeutic amount.  

After completion of a course of antibiotics, the maintenance dose should be continued for at least 2 weeks.

This article contains specific guidelines for restoring gut health after antibiotics.

Probiotics When Traveling

It is a good idea to take a probiotic when traveling as it is protective of pathogen exposure in an unfamiliar environment.

For example, taking 1-2 capsules of your preferred brand twice daily for 1 week prior to travel is a helpful preventative practice.

During travel, 2 capsules twice a day is recommended.

This regimen should be continued for at least 1 week after arriving back home.

This article contains detailed information on using probiotics for traveling to help keep you well.

Help! My Probiotic is Making Me Sick!

Whenever you introduce a healing food or supplement it is possible to experience a die-off reaction.

Pathogens are being eliminated and releasing their toxins, which can make you feel miserable if it happens too quickly.

Common die-off symptoms can include:

  • Feeling ill
  • Headaches
  • Bloating and digestive distress in general
  • Skin eruptions and rashes (eczema flare-up is common)
  • Lacking energy
  • More difficulty dealing with stress than usual
  • Mood swings & difficulty concentrating
  • Any other symptoms typical for you
  • For children, this can also show up as bedwetting, moodiness, tiredness, restlessness and any other symptoms typical to your child

Know that die-off symptoms mean the probiotic is working, so feel good about that!  

Introducing the probiotic slowly and increasing incrementally every few days to a week is a good practice.

To give you a personal example, when my Mom first started taking a probiotic, she could only handle 1/8 of a capsule per day at first. It was basically the equivalent of an infant dose!

She worked her way up slowly to the required dosage over a period of about 6 months.

Her ability to learn how to minimize die-off symptoms was extremely important. This enabled her to stay the course to resolve gut imbalance issues over the long haul.

Best Brands (re-vetted)

In conclusion, below are a handful of good brands to consider on your probiotic selection journey.

Several practitioners I personally know who specialize in gut healing protocols recommend one or more of them as well.

I’ve included suggested brands for improved gut health as well as oral probiotics for ear, nose, throat, and tooth/gum wellness.

These brands all use strains found in nature (no species that are intellectual property!).

  • Seed
  • Gut Restore (SBOs and candida-busting strains)
  • Ultimate SBO (high dose candida busting)
  • Pure Encapsulations
  • Prescript-Assist
  • Trenev Trio
  • Yeastbiotic (taken with antibiotics and for a few weeks after)
  • Baby Probiotic Powder (both lactobacillus and bifidobacteria)
  • Infant Probiotic Powder (bifidobacteria only for making homemade formula)
  • Pediatric Probiotic

**Beware that MANY (if not most) probiotic brands now contain one or more synthetically derived strains.

This is a recent and very worrisome development in the industry with probiotic species being identified as intellectual property on the label.

In my view, this is a breach of trust and a bait and switch for consumers seeking purely natural supplements!

Note that probiotic companies can often have one or two products that are safe to use and others that are not.

In other words, each product must be examined individually on its own merit.

If you have a question about your probiotic product of choice or are concerned about a labeling change, please reach out via the Healthy Home Plus purple chatbox (lower righthand corner of the screen) and I will vet your probiotic personally for you.

I hope you find this information helpful with sourcing the best probiotic supplement for the health of your family!

For more visual learners, below is a short video summarizing the main points of this article and how to be sure you get all the important types of beneficial microbes into your diet.

strongest therapeutic probiotic brands on granite counter

References

(1) How Many Bacterial Cells are in the Body?

More Information

How to Prepare the Birth Canal for the Probiotic Gulp
How Prebiotics Benefit Gut Health
Taking Probiotics  for Maximum Benefit

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Category: Natural Remedies, Oral Health
Sarah Pope

Sarah Pope MGA has been a Health and Nutrition Educator since 2002. She is a summa cum laude graduate in Economics from Furman University and holds a Master’s degree from the University of Pennsylvania.

She is the author of three books: Amazon #1 bestseller Get Your Fats Straight, Traditional Remedies for Modern Families, and Living Green in an Artificial World.

Her four eBooks Good Diet…Bad Diet, Real Food Fermentation, Ketonomics, and Ancestrally Inspired Dairy-Free Recipes are available for complimentary download via Healthy Home Plus.

Her mission is dedicated to helping families effectively incorporate the principles of ancestral diets within the modern household. She is a sought after lecturer around the world for conferences, summits, and podcasts.

Sarah was awarded Activist of the Year in 2010 at the International Wise Traditions Conference, subsequently serving on the Board of Directors of the nutrition nonprofit the Weston A. Price Foundation for seven years.

Her work has been covered by numerous independent and major media including USA Today, ABC, and NBC among many others.

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Reader Interactions

Comments (100)

  1. Scott

    Jun 16, 2015 at 6:21 pm

    Great article on how to narrow down which supplement brand is right for probiotics. I have a close friend of mine who took a supplement too that she swore up and down worked extremely well for her. I wanted to see if it was listed on a few forums before I considered buying a bottle myself. Still leaning towards her recommendation since this one has all of the essential ingredients that you mentioned.

    Reply
  2. David Wood

    Jun 9, 2015 at 3:59 am

    Very interesting indeed!

    Can you point to some kind of source information for the age related dosages you state? I’ve never seen anything like that after quite extensive reading on this subject.

    I’m not questioning that it makes sense – I’d just like to know what the doses are based on.

    Reply
  3. Total Flora

    May 20, 2015 at 10:57 am

    It’s hard to determine how many probiotic pills to take every day. I’ve noticed a flattened effect from the pills I’ve been taking. At first they had a profound effect on my bowel movements and now the bowel movements are nearly back to normal. I’ve increased the number of pills with each meal to compensate. At first I only took 2 pills in the morning and now I’m up to 3 pills in the morning with 2 more at lunch. This allegedly puts me in the 70 billion range.

    My suspicion is that the quality of the bacteria degrade faster than advertised. As such, you end up having to take more toward the end of a cycle than toward the beginning.

    I’ll try another brand when it’s time to order some more probiotics and see what the difference is.

    Reply
  4. Crystal

    May 12, 2015 at 3:40 pm

    Can I please see your citations?

    Reply
  5. Heathar

    May 11, 2015 at 9:13 pm

    This article was awesome. Thanks so much for sharing. I am putting together a cookbook and nourishing foods based program to help people heal their gut and this was awesome to read. Thank you!!

    Reply
  6. Jacob adom

    Mar 18, 2015 at 8:21 am

    There are a lot of probiotic supplements out there. I think the best are those the constitution of which is based on a scientific analysis of what strains of bacteria work for which maladies. Quality Nature is one such brand that seems to know what it’s doing.

    Reply
  7. May T.

    Mar 11, 2015 at 8:12 pm

    Hi Srah,

    I was wondering if you have any opinion on Advanced Naturals Ultimate FloraMax 30 Billion.
    You mentioned that adults need between 15 and 20 billion cells per day. Do you think 30 billion
    is too much, or is there no such thing?

    Reply
  8. christine

    Sep 25, 2014 at 10:56 am

    Sarah, this article is SO helpful! Question: If I have young children who cannot swallow capsules, should I open up a capsules and mix it with water for them? Or do you have another suggestion? Please advise! thanks so much!
    -christine

    Reply
    • Sarah TheHealthyHomeEconomist

      Sep 25, 2014 at 11:30 am

      Yes, that’s fine 🙂

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