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Health See other Health Articles Title: Science says a poo transplant through the nose works better than antibiotics ScienceAlert... Its not for the squeamish, but theres a relatively new medical procedure called faecal transplanting which is outperforming antibiotics against severe infections. Doctors essentially take poo from a healthy person, freeze it, liquidise it in a blender, then add it to a sick persons bowel either by a tube through the nose or via the rectum. The method, which colonises the gut with healthy bacteria, has a 85 percent success rate against life-threatening infections such as Clostridium compared to only 20 percent for standard antibiotic treatment. Australian regulators are yet to make a decision on the use of faecal transplants but local clinics are reportedly offering the procedure. A report in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) says long term trials and monitoring are urgently needed to provide sensible advice to patients. However, so far few adverse effects are being reported after more than 7,000 transplants. And the transplants seem relatively safe for elderly patients and those with impaired immune systems, say Tim Spector from Kings College London and Rob Knight from the University of California San Diego. More than 500 centres in the US now offer faecal transplantation, with most using frozen donations from the not-for-profit stool bank organisation, OpenBiome, in Boston. The UK regulator (MRHA) has temporarily classed faecal transplants as a medicinal product. Faecal transplantation is also being tested for other conditions including obesity, diabetes, irritable bowel syndrome and colitis. However, Spector and Knight say claims that faecal transplantation could be a cure-all for many diseases are probably too optimistic. And there are risks of infection. And the transfer of microbes to a new host could include transferring susceptibility to obesity and even mental illness. "These possible risks suggest that faecal transplantation, although an exciting new tool, should be carefully monitored and refined to include most of the key beneficial microbes," Spector and Knight write in the BMJ. This article was originally published by Business Insider. More from Business Insider: Psychologists found a surprising benefit to feeling guilty all the time 17 books Bill Gates thinks everyone should read These are 10 of the best wildlife pictures taken in the last 20 years Gorgeous photos of a rapidly vanishing natural wonder that could be gone before 2100 Here's how much actual pumpkin is in that pumpkin spice latte Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)
U.S. Constitution - Article IV, Section 4: NO BORDERS + NO LAWS = NO COUNTRY
Logically this would mean an injection of this muck into the brain would cure the Booshes, Clintoons, Obongos et al. Seriously, folks, been reading seeing this therapy mentioned in the weird news sites. Whatever works, right? If it does. Don't think I'd accept it through the nose, tho.
This is one shitty treatment and I think the whole notion stinks. [Gives new meaning to the phrase "eat shit and die" ! ] "Honest, April 15th is the real April Fool's Day". "The almighty Dollar ain't worth a buck". Doug Scheidt
Actually dogs have discovered the medicinal nature of poo, particularly vitamins and other metabolites produced by certain bacteria and thus are sometimes found eating it. I explained this to a dog-owner friend. She said to her dog: You hear that! But this dog gave me a skeptical eye as he lay on the floor.
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