We're bringing B. Infantis back into your gut.

As infants, our immune system learns to distinguish danger from the harmless.

In the first months of life, the immune system calibrates itself; it learns when it needs to react and when it doesn't.

A key role in this is played by a bacterium:
Bifido infantis.

It colonizes 50–90% of an infant's gut, metabolizes special milk sugars from breast milk, and trains the immune defense in the process.

As adults, we lose it. And with it, its regulating effect on the immune system.

Without this trainer, the body sounds the alarm at harmless stimuli and keeps inflammation running.

The consequence: chronic inflammation, one of the central drivers of aging.

Silent, persistent inflammation accelerates nearly every aging process; experts call it inflammaging.

In our peer-reviewed study, B. infantis has an inflammation-regulating effect.¹

read our study

You feel it.
Every day.

We've developed a way to establish the bacterium in adults.

It colonizes 50–90% of an infant's gut, metabolizes special milk sugars from breast milk, and trains the immune defense in the process.

Apply now for Early Access.

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