Free Educational Summit
The Gut-Brain Connection
New Frontiers in Brain Health
Discover how the gut, microbiome, immune system, inflammation, nutrition, and nervous system influence one of the most important communication networks in the human body.
Register for the Free SummitWhat You'll Learn
The Gut-Brain Axis
How the gut and brain communicate through nerves, hormones, immune signals, and the microbiome.
Microbiome & Mood
Why gut bacteria may influence stress response, neurotransmitters, mood, and cognition.
Inflammation & Brain Health
How chronic inflammation may affect mental clarity, energy, neurological resilience, and aging.
Food & Brain Function
How nutrient-dense foods and dietary patterns influence cellular health and brain performance.
Stress & the Nervous System
How stress can disrupt digestion, sleep, mood, microbiome balance, and metabolism.
Functional Patterns
Why symptoms often make more sense when we look at systems working together.
Featured Experts
Meet the Speakers
Hear from internationally recognized physicians, researchers, and educators who are helping shape the future of gut-brain health.
Included When You Register
Free Gut-Brain Resources
16 Superfoods to Supercharge Your Brain
12 Doctors, 12 Brain Secrets
Brain Drain
Brain Games
Why I'm Recommending This Summit
This topic reflects the same philosophy I use in my own practice: the body is not a collection of separate parts. The gut, brain, immune system, hormones, metabolism, and nervous system are constantly communicating.
When that communication becomes disrupted, symptoms may show up in places that seem unrelated. Brain fog, digestive changes, mood shifts, fatigue, sleep disruption, blood sugar changes, and inflammation can all be part of a larger pattern.
This summit is a valuable opportunity to better understand those connections and learn why supporting the gut-brain relationship can be so important.
How This Connects to Functional Testing
Functional lab testing can help identify patterns that are not always obvious from symptoms alone. Depending on the person, testing may include evaluation of digestion, microbiome balance, inflammation, immune activity, nutrient status, hormones, environmental stressors, or metabolic function.
Testing does not replace clinical thinking. It adds another layer of information so we can better understand which systems may need support and in what order.
Learn About Functional TestingReady to Explore the Gut-Brain Connection?
Register for the free summit and begin learning from experts who are helping explain one of the most important connections in health.
Register for the Free Summit