A mother’s body may be quietly rewriting her child’s mind. Not through genes or trauma, but through the invisible churn of bacteria in her gut. Inflammation. Molecules. A single pathway misfiring at the worst possible moment. If the microbiome can tip a fetus toward autism-like changes, then every meal, every infection, every antibiotic suddenly mat… Continues…
Inside this emerging science is a story that feels both hopeful and deeply unsettling. The idea that gut bacteria can nudge the immune system to alter fetal brain wiring suggests autism risk might be influenced by factors we can, in theory, modify. Yet it also means that an ordinary infection, a subtle imbalance, or a well-intentioned treatment during pregnancy could have consequences no one sees until years later. That dual reality is forcing scientists to move slowly, resisting easy answers or blame.
