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Probiotics are microbes that protect their host, and in
some cases they can prevent disease. They are immunomodulating bacteria that have very low virulence compared with the more pathogenic gut
flora such as Escherichia coli and clostridia. Lactobacilli and bifidobacteria are examples of probiotics found in the large intestine.
Lactobacillus GG can prevent diarrhoea and atopy
in children.
1 2
In the gut, probiotic bacteria are
thought to occupy binding sites on the gut mucosa, preventing
pathogenic bacteria from adhering to the mucosa. Lactobacilli also
produce proteinaceous compounds Diarrhoea associated with antibiotics is presumed to result from
the antibiotics disrupting the normal flora in the gut of a healthy
person. Such disruptions cause dysfunction of the gut's ecosystem, and
they may allow pathogenic bacteria to colonise the gut and
gain access to the mucosa. Whether probiotic supplements stop this
process by reducing the disruption or by acting as substitutes for the
healthy flora is unclear. Probiotics may compete with pathogens for the
nutrients the pathogens need to grow, or they may modify toxins
produced by pathogens or toxin receptors found in the gut wall, or they
may stimulate immune responses to pathogens.
The exact mechanisms by which probiotics prevent atopy are also under
debate.3 One suggestion is that the establishment and
maintenance of innate immune tolerance is mediated by T helper 1 cells
and linked in some way to the faecal flora. If the Th1 response is
particularly robust, the allergic response mediated by T helper 2 cells tends not to be so strong. Probiotics may prevent atopy by
supporting the faecal flora, strengthening the Th1 response, and
reducing the allergic response.
In the countries of continental Europe, probiotics are regarded as
medicines, and they are prescribed alongside antibiotics. In other
countries, probiotics are marketed as supplements and are sold over the
counter BMJ
bacteriocins
that act as local
antibiotics against more pathogenic organisms. But what is known about
what happens in vitro cannot necessarily be extrapolated to the
complexity of the ecosystem of the human gut.
although preparations such as "bioyoghurts" do not always
contain probiotic strains proved to be clinically useful.
References
| 1. | Szajewska H, Mrukowicz JZ. Probiotics in the treatment and prevention of acute infectious diarrhoea in infants and children: a systematic review of published randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled trials. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001; 33 (suppl): S17-S25. |
| 2. | Kalliomaki M, Salminen S, Arvilommi H, Kero P, Koskinen P, Isolauri E. Probiotics in primary prevention of atopic disease: a randomised placebo-controlled trial. Lancet 2001; 357: 1076-1079[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. |
| 3. | Murch S. Toll of allergy reduced by probiotics. Lancet 2001; 357: 1057-1059[CrossRef][Web of Science][Medline]. |
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