Gout tied to hidden gut bacteriaGout is surging worldwide, and new research shows it’s far more than a joint disease.

A major review in Clinical and Experimental Rheumatology reveals just how much progress scientists made in the past year.

More than 55 million people now live with gout, a number expected to climb to 96 million by 2050. Obesity and kidney disease are the biggest drivers, but the roots go deeper.

Genetics plays a role.

Over 350 DNA sites have now been linked to uric acid levels. Many of these same genes also affect heart disease, diabetes, and immune function.

That helps explain why gout so often comes with other health problems.

On the cellular side, researchers are uncovering how uric acid crystals trigger the painful inflammation. Proteins like NCOA6 and CD38, as well as ion channels inside immune cells, are now known to fuel the NLRP3 inflammasome—the spark behind flares.

Other work shows that neutrophil “NETs” and a type of cell death called pyroptosis can either worsen or resolve attacks depending on the balance.

But most importantly… your gut plays an important role.

Gout patients lack bacteria that normally help your body clear uric acid.

And new studies show that restoring gut health lowers uric acid and calms inflammation.

Now this is no surprise to me.

For over 25 years, I’ve helped hundreds of people eliminate their gout symptoms for good.

Not by focusing on cutting out uric acid, but by restoring their gut flora using the right foods and lifestyle changes.

You can learn the exact steps these ex-gout-sufferers took here…