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Hacking Your Body's Bacteria for Better Health


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#1 zoolander

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 08:30 AM


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Hacking Your Body's Bacteria for Better Health
Brandon Keim  04.26.07 | 2:00 AM

Modern humans are bacteria-killing machines. We assassinate microbes with hand soap, mouthwash and bathroom cleaners. It feels clean and right.

But some scientists say we're overdoing it. All this killing may actually cause diseases like eczema, irritable bowel syndrome and even diabetes. The answer, they say, is counterintuitive: Feed patients bacteria.

"Probiotics (pills containing bacteria) have resulted in complete elimination of eczema in 80 percent of the people we've treated," says Dr. Joseph E. Pizzorno Jr., a practicing physician and former member of the White House Commission on Complementary and Alternative Medicine Policy. Pizzorno says he's used probiotics to treat irritable bowel disease, acne and even premenstrual syndrome. "It's unusual for me to see a patient with a chronic disease that doesn't respond to probiotics."

Clinical trial data on probiotics is incomplete, but there are many indications that hacking the body's bacteria is beneficial.

In sheer numbers, bacterial cells in the body outnumber our own by a factor of 10, with 50 trillion bacteria living in the digestive system alone, where they've remained largely unstudied until the last decade. As scientists learn more about them, they're beginning to chart the complex symbiosis between the tiny bugs and our health.

"The microbes that live in the human body are quite ancient," says NYU Medical Center microbiologist Dr. Martin Blaser, a pioneer in gut microbe research. "They've been selected (through evolution) because they help us."

And it now appears that our daily antibacterial regimens are disrupting a balance that once protected humans from health problems, especially allergies and malfunctioning immune responses.

"After the Second World War, when our lifestyles changed dramatically, allergies increased. Autoimmune diseases like diabetes and inflammatory bowel disease are increasing," says Kaarina Kukkonen, a University of Helsinki allergy expert. "The theory behind (what causes) the diseases is the same: Lacking bacterial stimulation in our environments may cause this increase. I think this is the tip of the iceberg."

In a recent study, Kukkonen and her colleagues gave a probiotic containing four strains of gut bacteria to 461 infants labeled as high risk for developing allergic disorders. After two years, the children were 25 percent less likely than those given a placebo to develop eczema, a type of allergic skin inflammation. The study was published in the January issue of Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology.

Microbial exposures early in life, scientists believe, cause mild inflammation that calibrates the body's responses to other pathogens and contaminants later in life. Without exposure as infants, researchers say, people can end up with unbalanced immune systems.

"Many of the most difficult problems in medicine today are chronic inflammatory diseases," says Blaser. "These include rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, atherosclerosis, eczema and multiple sclerosis. One possibility is that they're autoimmune or genetic diseases. The other possibility is that they are physiological responses to changes in microbiota."

Blaser's specialty is Helicobacter pylori, a strain once common in every human stomach but now rare in the West. Its disappearance may have benefits: H. pylori-related inflammation is associated with peptic ulcers and some stomach cancers. However, H. pylori also reduces acid reflux, which in turn is associated with asthma and esophageal cancers.

H. pylori's decline, says Blaser, correlates with a rapid rise in those afflictions. H. pylori deficiency may also contribute to obesity, he says, because the bacteria help regulate production of two hormones, ghrelin and leptin, that affect metabolism and appetite.

Low levels of Bacteroidetes have also been linked to obesity. Studies indicate that bacterial imbalances are associated with irritable bowel syndrome, post-surgical infections and type 1 diabetes.

The health-food movement has moved ahead with probiotics without regard for clinical trial results. Women commonly use supplements like acidophilus to treat yeast infections. Other probiotics are making their way into products such as Kashi Vive cereal "to help you care for your digestive system" and Dannon's Activia yogurt, which in its first year boasted more than $100 million in sales. But scientists say over-the-counter probiotics are of inconsistent quality.

Pizzorno, for example, buys his probiotics from companies that sell directly to doctors. Consumer probiotics don't always contain medically recognized bacterial strains, he said, and often the bacteria they contain are dead.

"Most of the companies don't have any research ongoing at all," says Stig Bengmark, a University of London hepatologist. "They buy cheap bacteria from yogurt companies and say it's good, but it's never proven."

To more precisely hack the gut bacteria, Blaser calls for a Gut Genome Project, modeled after the Human Genome Project. It's a daunting task: The human genome, mapped to great fanfare but still dimly understood, contains a tenth of the genes believed to be in our gut bacteria. But though difficult, such research could prove vital.

"The world is very aware of the concept of global warming, which is a macro-ecological change," Blaser says. "I postulate that there are similar micro-ecological changes going on inside us."



#2 Live Forever

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 01:40 PM

Feed patients bacteria.

MMMmmm.... I love the taste of bacteria.

#3 trance

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 03:54 PM

Kefir good ...

I always have at least one bottle of this in my fridge:

http://www.lifeway.net/

"All Lifeway products contain the following 10 live & active Kefir cultures:

Lactobacillius Lactis
Lactobacillus Rhamnosus
Streptococcus Diacetylactis
Lactobacillus Plantarum
Lactobacillius Casei
Saccharomyces Florentinus
Leuconostoc Cremoris
Bifidobacterium Longum
Bifidobacterium Breve
Lactobacillus Acidophilus"


Trance

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#4 Shepard

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 04:28 PM

Kefir good ...

I always have at least one bottle of this in my fridge:

http://www.lifeway.net/


Some of the hardcore kefir growers have come down hard on what is sold in stores. We should do a topic on prebiotics (which I'm a bigger fan of) vs. probiotics.

#5 catdaddy

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 05:01 PM

I haven't really been sick in at least two years and I believe this to be in part due to my yogurt consumption. I eat it practically every day, with blueberries, granola and almonds or sunflower seeds. Delicious and nutritious!

The brand I use is Cascade Fresh and the cultures are:


Lactobacillus acidophilus
Streptococcus thermophilus
Lactobacillus rhamnosus
Bifidobacterium bifidum
Lactobacillus casei
Bifidobacterium longum
Lactobacillus bulgaricus
Bifidobacterium infantis



http://www.cascadefr...m/cultures.html

#6 trance

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 05:40 PM

Kefir good ...

I always have at least one bottle of this in my fridge:

http://www.lifeway.net/


Some of the hardcore kefir growers have come down hard on what is sold in stores. We should do a topic on prebiotics (which I'm a bigger fan of) vs. probiotics.

Yeap, I thought about and researched doing the homegrown kefir route myself.

I realize the commercial kefirs lack the carbonation, alcohol, and some other documented benefits, but it seemed too much of a hassle at the time as to which kefir grain/strain was best, the time it would take to monitor the fermentation, the continual inoculations, etc, of the "homegrown" process.

This time, in my respect anyway, simple convenience won out.

#7 mediumspiny

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 06:32 PM

Lactobacillus acidophilus
Streptococcus thermophilus
Lactobacillus rhamnosus     
Bifidobacterium bifidum
Lactobacillus casei         
Bifidobacterium longum
Lactobacillus bulgaricus
Bifidobacterium infantis

Half of these bacteria are Lactobacilli. I take it that their job in life is to digest lactose. If you don't eat yogurt (or other dairy products), do you need these bacteria?

My point is that I wonder what evidence there is as to which bacteria give the health improvements and whether they are contained in yogurt?

#8 macanizer

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 07:03 PM

This reminded me of an interview I saw on CNN. A high school kid demonstrating what mixing ordinary vanilla yogurt with pure e. coli would do...

But for grown-up fun you should look at all the research the Soviets did on bacteriophages. There's no potential benefit for the biotech/pharma companies for all this, good thing they don't rule over Georgia (not that Georgia, the other one)

#9 trance

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 07:10 PM

Lactobacillus acidophilus
Streptococcus thermophilus
Lactobacillus rhamnosus     
Bifidobacterium bifidum
Lactobacillus casei         
Bifidobacterium longum
Lactobacillus bulgaricus
Bifidobacterium infantis

Half of these bacteria are Lactobacilli. I take it that their job in life is to digest lactose. If you don't eat yogurt (or other dairy products), do you need these bacteria?

My point is that I wonder what evidence there is as to which bacteria give the health improvements and whether they are contained in yogurt?

Many do digest lactose -- and other sugars & carbohydrate substances -- but their name "Lacto.." is rather associated due to the fact that these bacteria produce lactic acid.

#10 durandal

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Posted 27 April 2007 - 09:39 PM

I make my own kefir from grains and it is really simple.

#11 Mind

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Posted 19 April 2009 - 03:52 PM

The deep symbiosis between bacteria and their human hosts is forcing scientists to ask: Are we organisms or living ecosystems?

In October, researchers in several countries launched the International Human Microbiome Consortium, an effort to characterize the role of microbes in the human body. Just over a year ago, the National Institutes of Health also launched its own Human Microbiome Project. These new efforts represent a formal recognition of bacteria’s far-reaching influence, including their contributions to human health and certain illnesses. “This could be the basis of a whole new way of looking at disease,” said microbiologist Margaret McFall-Ngai at the 108th General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in Boston last June. But the emerging science of human-microbe symbiosis has an even greater implication. “Human beings are not really individuals; they’re communities of organisms,” says McFall-Ngai. It’s not just that our bodies serve as a habitat for other organisms; it’s also that we function with them as a collective. As the profound interrelationship between humans and microbes becomes more apparent, the distinction between host and hosted has become both less clear and less important — together we operate as a constantly evolving man-microbe kibbutz. Which raises a startling implication: If being Homo sapiens through and through implied a certain authority over our corporeal selves, we are now forced to relinquish some of that control to our inner-dwelling microbes. Ironically, the human ingenuity that drives us to understand more about ourselves is revealing that we’re much less “human” than we once thought.






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