Hydrogen Water and Gut Health — What a 2021 Review of Early Evidence Found

STUDY AT A GLANCE

Published

2021

Journal

Journal of Functional Foods

Study type

Review

Participants

N/A — literature review

This article summarises findings from a peer-reviewed scientific
study. Health4me does not make medical claims. The information
presented here is for educational purposes only and should not
be taken as medical advice. Always consult your doctor or
healthcare provider before making changes to your treatment
or wellness routine.

Hydrogen-rich water (HRW) has been studied for cardiovascular, metabolic, and exercise outcomes for years. The gut microbiome is a newer frontier. A 2021 narrative review in the Journal of Functional Foods, authored by Sergej M. Ostojic, brought together the small body of evidence available at the time and asked a focused question: does drinking molecular hydrogen actually change the composition or function of the bacteria living in our intestines?

What the review examined

Ostojic synthesised the available pre-clinical and clinical evidence on HRW and gut microbiota — a handful of rodent studies and one human randomised controlled trial, all published from 2018 onwards. The framing is mechanistic: hydrogen can be both produced and consumed by gut bacteria, which makes the intestine a natural site of action for exogenous molecular hydrogen.

Feeding hydrogen-producing bacteria

Several studies suggested HRW shifts the microbial balance toward bacteria that themselves produce endogenous H2, including species that contribute to gut barrier integrity. The result is a small but consistent enrichment of bacterial groups associated with healthier microbiome profiles.

Upregulation of butyrate-producing species

Butyrate — a short-chain fatty acid produced when gut bacteria ferment fibre — is one of the most important molecules for intestinal health and barrier function. The review highlights that across the available studies, HRW intake was associated with an upregulation of butyrate-producing bacteria, which may partly explain its observed gut-protective effects.

Protecting the intestinal barrier

In rodent models of gut microbiota disturbance, HRW improved clinical features such as diarrhoea rate, weight loss, and fluid loss, and protected the integrity of the intestinal barrier. These effects are consistent with H2‘s broader role in dampening oxidative stress and inflammation in tissue.

What it means in practice

This is an early-stage field. With only one human RCT in the review, no claims about specific clinical outcomes can be drawn for individual readers. What the review does establish is a plausible mechanism and a consistent direction of effect across the small evidence base — enough to take HRW seriously as a topic for further microbiome research, not enough to position it as a treatment.

Citation: Ostojic, S.M. (2021). Hydrogen-rich water as a modulator of gut microbiota? Journal of Functional Foods, 78, 104360. DOI: 10.1016/j.jff.2021.104360

Interested in learning more?

Read more about the science behind our therapies — or explore the devices we carry.

Related Posts