Non-Profit Trusted Source of Non-Commercial Health Information
The Original Voice of the American Academy of Anti-Aging, Preventative, and Regenerative Medicine
logo logo
Anti-Aging

Good' Donor Bacteria Can Last Long Term in Stool Transplant Patients

6 years, 6 months ago

10537  0
Posted on Sep 25, 2017, 8 a.m.

Researchers say their small study offers the first proof that therapeutic donor microbes remain for months or years in patients who've undergone stool transplants.

“I read about this several months ago. It just kind of throughs me back a little as stool itself is so insanitary. Anything helping our digestive track is going to help us live longer, healthier lives. With that said this still seems like there would be a lot of risk in using healthy stool. I really need to see a lot more research,” pointed out Dr. Ronald Klatz, President of the A4M. “Part of the Anti-Aging Medicine message is you have to have an open mind, and in the same sense, you have to objectively look at the science being proposed. I am trying to keep an open mind about stool transplants, but I do find it difficult.”

(HealthDay News) -- Researchers say their small study offers the first proof that therapeutic donor microbes remain for months or years in patients who've undergone stool transplants.

Medically known as "fecal microbiota transplantation" (FMT), the procedure is used to treat severe diarrhea and colitis caused by repeated Clostridium difficileinfections, the researchers explained.

FMT is an increasingly popular treatment for C. difficile infections, with a 90 percent success rate. It involves collecting stool from a healthy donor and mixing it with salt water. The solution is then transferred to the patient's digestive tract through a thin, flexible tube called a colonoscope, or through the nose.

  1. difficilegut infections can be deadly. They often follow use of antibiotics that change the normal balance of bacteria in a patient's gut. C. difficileis increasingly resistant to standard antibiotic treatments.

The aim of a fecal transplant is to restore beneficial gut bacteria. A balance of good and bad bacteria makes it easier to fight infection.

The study included seven patients. In two, some donor microbe strains persisted as long as two years after a transplant. In five others, donor strains persisted for three to six months, according to the University of Alabama at Birmingham researchers.

They were led by Ranjit Kumar, a biomedical informatics specialist.

"The demonstration that certain transplanted microbes can persist for up to two years demonstrates the potential of using FMT for long-term changes in the composition of the gastrointestinal tract microbe communities," the researchers wrote.

They said the results offer insights "that are essential for development of new approaches to improve health via manipulation of this complex microbial community."

The Alabama researchers added that the method they used to zero in on specific strains of gut bacteria for their study may help warn of changes related to illnesses like diabetes, obesity, ulcerative colitis or Parkinson's disease.

"This early warning system could be used to signal the use of interventions, such as microbe transplants, designed to maintain the gut microbe community structure necessary for efficient metabolic function needed for human health," said study co-author Casey Morrow, retired professor of cell, developmental and integrative biology.

The study was published online recently in the journal Biofilms and Microbiomes.

More information

For more on FMT, go to the Fecal Transplant Foundation.

-- Robert Preidt

SOURCE: University of Alabama at Birmingham, news release, June 13, 2017

Copyright © 2017 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Dr. Ronald Klatz, DO, MD President of the A4M has 28,000 Physician Members, has trained over 150,000 Physicians, health professionals and scientists in the new specialty of Anti-aging medicine. Estimates of their patients numbering in the 100’s of millions World Wide that are living better stronger, healthier and longer lives. www.WorldHealth.net

WorldHealth Videos