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posted by martyb on Friday November 13 2015, @04:18PM   Printer-friendly
from the poo-pill-prescriptions-provide-partial-protection dept.

In a battle against an infection, antibiotics can bring victory over enemy germs. Yet that war-winning aid can come with significant collateral damage; microbial allies and innocents are killed off, too. Such casualties may be unavoidable in some cases, but a lot of people take antibiotics when they're not necessary or appropriate. And the toll of antibiotics on a healthy microbiome can, in some places, be serious, a new study suggests.

In two randomized, placebo-controlled trials of healthy people, a single course of oral antibiotics altered the composition and diversity of the gut microbiome for months, and in some cases up to a year. Such shifts could clear the way for pathogens, including the deadly Clostridium difficile. Those community changes can also alter microbiome activities, including interacting with the immune system and helping with digestion. Overall, the data, published Tuesday in the journal mBio, suggests that antibiotics may have more side effects than previously thought—at least in the gut.

In the mouth, on the other hand, researchers found that microbial communities fared much better, rebounding in weeks after antibiotic treatments. The finding raises the question of why the oral microbiome is less disturbed by drugs. It could simply be because of the way that antibiotics, taken orally, circulate through the body. Or, it could imply that oral microbiomes are innately more resilient, a quality that would be useful to replicate in microbial communities all over the body.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by Reziac on Saturday November 14 2015, @03:02AM

    by Reziac (2489) on Saturday November 14 2015, @03:02AM (#263005) Homepage

    Erm...

    http://feinmantheother.com/2015/11/10/red-meat-and-cancer/ [feinmantheother.com]

    As to the trials... how do we know their previous gut biome was optimal, or even normal? might be their previous flora was in various ways screwed up, and had been so a long time. In fact I'd investigate the possibility that what was now missing was actually an invading species, or a chance colonizer that doesn't matter one way or the other... because just everyday living should offer plentiful opportunity for recolonization, if that bacterium belongs there. Or maybe the subject acquired it elsewhere but has since moved to an environment where that species doesn't occur. Our gut bacteria don't spontaneously generate; we ingest them from our environment (including whatever sources arrive via the very food we eat).

    --
    And there is no Alkibiades to come back and save us from ourselves.
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