Bloating

Struggling with bloating? Here’s what you need to know to find relief.

ALL TEST ARE ACCREDITED & REGULATED BY

What is bloating?

When you’re bloated, your stomach or abdomen can feel full and uncomfortable, or even painful.

This bloating happens when your gastrointestinal tract contains too much gas or air. Bloating can be mild, or more severe, and may present as:

– A visibly distended or swollen abdomen

– Feeling very full and uncomfortable

– Feeling of tightness in the abdomen

– Excess gas – belching and/or flatulence

– Rumbling or gurgling

There are several causes of bloating, so it’s important to diagnose the cause of your bloating and find out why it’s happening to you.

Why does bloating happen?

Prolonged periods of bloating could indicate an underlying health problem, if so you should see your GP.

Possible causes can include:

  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS diagnosis)

  • Ulcerative colitis, a form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), where the inner lining of the large bowel is inflamed and develops ulcers

  • Crohn’s disease, the other form of IBD, where some parts of your colon are inflamed

  • Too much bacteria in your small intestine (called small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, or SIBO)

  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease

  • Food intolerances, especially lactose or fructose intolerance

  • Producing too much gas (dysbiosis and fermentation)

  • Weight gain

  • Stress or anxiety

  • Delays in your food and drink moving on from your stomach (called gastroparesis)

  • Eating too quickly, so that you swallow too much air (called aerophagia)

Diagnosing bloating

Feeling bloated is no fun, but once you know what’s going on you can start to manage your symptoms and the underlying causes.

Testing options:

At the Functional Gut Clinic, we can run the following tests to diagnose the causes of bloating:

  • Gastric emptying test– which measures how quickly food leaves your stomach

  • Carbohydrate malabsorption breath test– which finds out if you have certain food intolerances (lactose or fructose)

  • Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) breath test– which finds out if you have an overgrowth of bacteria in your small intestine (called SIBO)

  • Oesophageal manometry– which measures the function of your oesophagus (food pipe)

  • 24-hour pH impedance monitoring– which looks at whether you have any reflux

  • Colonic transit study-a non-invasive test which looks at how long it takes for faeces to pass through your bowl

Learn more about bloating

How Alcohol Affects Your Gut Microbiome Explained

How Alcohol Affects Your Gut Microbiome

February 23, 20264 min read

Drinking too much alcohol normally feels like a problem for your head (and your liver). You wake up tired, with a throbbing headache and really just not your best. But think a little deeper, and the gut effects become clearer. The nausea. The changes in bowel habit. The stomach ache that gets worse as the week goes on.

Alcohol negatively affects your gut microbiome. That’s the community of trillions of bacteria (and hundreds of bacterial species) living in your gut. Far from harmful, these bacteria support gut function, regulate your immune system, and even synthesise essential vitamins.

If you’ve noticed the effects of alcohol lasting longer after the hangover, that’s probably down to your gut bacteria. But how does alcohol impact your microbiome? And how long do the effects last? Let’s find out.

The Functional Gut Clinic offers specialist testing to assess your microbiome. Find out what effect alcohol is having on your gut.

What Happens In Your Gut When You Drink Alcohol

What happens if you feed your plants vodka? They probably wouldn’t survive long. Different species, whether a plant or bacteria, require a specific environment to survive. If the environment is poisoned, then the species dies.

Alcohol can directly alter the gut environment and damage sensitive bacterial populations. One study found that within 30 minutes of drinking alcohol, your gut microbiome begins to be affected. Specifically, bacterial endotoxin levels rise, which is a trigger for inflammation.

In small amounts, it can increase stomach acid, which may irritate the stomach lining. In larger amounts, it can suppress acid and digestive enzyme release, slowing digestion and increasing the risk of discomfort and reflux.

Alcohol and Gut Bacteria: Who Thrives and Who Struggles

Your gut contains many different bacterial species. To simplify, we can think of them in two groups: the “good” and the “bad.” Good bacteria like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium provide vital services such as protecting the gut lining and supporting healthy digestion. Harmful bacteria disrupt these processes, leading to inflammation, bloating, and changes in bowel habit.

Regular alcohol intake reduces levels of beneficial gut bacteria, especially those involved in maintaining gut barrier health and controlling inflammation. Alcohol can disrupt many bacterial populations. The risk is what comes next.

Because there’s less competition, opportunistic bacteria can proliferate rapidly, colonising your gut. Alongside changes in gut pH and impaired immune signalling, it makes it much easier for them to get a foothold.

With repeated alcohol exposure, this lack of diversity worsens. That’s why people who drink regularly often experience bloating, abdominal discomfort, food sensitivities, or changes in bowel habits, even if their diet hasn’t changed.

Alcohol, Gut Barrier Damage, and Inflammation

Alcohol is an irritant. Not only does it harm the bacteria that keep the gut together, but it also weakens the tight junctions between intestinal cells directly.

The result is a leakier gut. As it becomes more permeable, substances that normally stay in the bowel begin to enter the bloodstream. Lipopolysaccharides (LPS), for example, trigger low-grade, systemic inflammation.

No wonder people feel tired, stressed and anxious following excessive drinking.

How Alcohol Affects Nutrient Absorption

Letting in the harmful compounds you want to keep out is one thing. But alcohol also prevents the absorption of some nutrients you need.

According to current research, alcohol affects the absorption of glucose, glutamine, vitamins B1 (thiamine), B2 (riboflavin), B9 (folate), C (ascorbic acid), selenium, iron, and zinc within the small intestine. 

How? Well, at a cellular level, it disrupts the transporters that carry these essential nutrients across the cell wall. Or it can simply prevent the nutrient from binding.

A few drinks might not be enough to cause a problem. Prolonged drinking, however, can often lead to nutrient deficiencies. People with alcohol abuse disorder, for example, frequently have a vitamin B1 deficiency leading to Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.

Does Occasional Drinking Affect the Gut?

In short, yes.

Even small amounts of alcohol can influence the gut environment. Think of it like disinfecting a counter. If you use a 0.1% alcohol solution, you won’t fully disinfect the surface, but you’ll still some bacteria. Douse the counter in 60% alcohol, however, and it’ll be far more disruptive.

The same is true for your gut.

A few glasses of red wine are unlikely to cause significant disruption. It may even have some benefits thanks to the polyphenols. But drinking large amounts in a single sitting or every single day will have a negative effect in the long term. And it can take weeks or even months to correct the damage to your gut microbiome from alcohol.

Noticing Gut Symptoms After Drinking? Get Answers

If alcohol is affecting your digestion long after the hangover has passed, it may be a sign that your gut microbiome is under strain. While cutting back can help, it doesn’t always explain what’s happening inside your gut.

The Functional Gut Clinic offers personalised microbiome testing to assess how alcohol could be affecting your gut bacteria, barrier function, and inflammation, helping you take practical steps to support recovery.

You might interested to read the next article: Acid Reflux and Postnasal Drip: What’s the Connection?

how alcohol affects gut microbiomealcohol effects on gutgut microbiome
Back to Blog

Hear from people we’ve helped, just like you.

"Very professional while welcoming and friendly"

"The manner and demeanour of all staff from reception to people carrying out the test was very professional but welcoming and friendly. Atmosphere is very relaxed and all instructions clear and concise."

London Patient

"Highly recommend this"

"Thanks to Dr Hobson and everyone at the Functional Gut Clinic. The whole team is very kind and generous and they are doing things that are cutting edge and they actually get results."

Manchester Patient

"Highly recommend this"

"After stopping my lansoprazole, every time I had a warm drink, I could feel it burn all the way down to my stomach. Thank you to Sam for making me feel at ease." - Manchester Patient

"My experience could not be better"

"Pleasant and knowledgeable staff that made the experience more enjoyable than it should be!" - London Patient

"Very friendly and knowledgeable"

"An excellent service from beginning to end. I would recommend to anyone who was considering having testing done. Very friendly and knowledgeable!" - Manchester Patient

"Very kind and helpful"

"It was also great to have time to talk to the clinicians – very important when you have problems. Reception staff also very kind and helpful." - Manchester Patient

Are you experiencing any other symptoms

Symptoms are often closely connected. Find out more below.

Reflux

Burning mid-chest, worse when bending or lying down

Constipation

Difficulty going to the toilet, unusual stools, often with stomach ache or intestinal cramps, bloating, nausea or appetite loss

Heartburn

A burning pain in your chest, just behind your breastbone.

The pain is often worse after eating...

Regurgitation

Bringing food or drink back up, difficulty swallowing, feeling that food or drink is stuck in your throat, horrible taste in your mouth

Swallowing Issues

Dysphagia - difficulty swallowing, feeling that food or drink is stuck in your throat, horrible taste in your mouth

Diarrhoea

Loose or explosive stools, can’t get to a toilet in time

Abdominal Pain

Cramps; sharp or dull pain, Bloating, Excessive belching, Nausea or vomiting

Faecal Incontinence

Stools leak unexpectedly, Can’t get to a toilet in time

IBS

Abdominal pain or cramping, bloating, changes in bowel habits and urgency, gas