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How Antibiotics Disrupt Intestinal Flora

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How Antibiotics Disrupt Intestinal Flora
by Dr. Edward Group | Infowars.com | September 27, 2015


70% of your immune response takes place in your digestive tract.

The Harvard Medical School reports antibiotic side effects last for 42 days after the last dose. [1]

You’re probably familiar with many of these side effects: diarrhea, irritable bowels, bloating, and maybe even painful constipation. What you don’t see are aggressive and dangerous bacteria, like Clostridium difficile, E. coli, H. pylori, and a fungus like Candida establishing themselves in your gut. But when you take antibiotics, nasty bugs like these can do just that. The Harvard Medical School reports antibiotic side effects lasts for 42 days after the last dose.

Antibiotics: The Cure with a Catch

When you get a prescription for an antibiotic, you feel good that you’re on the path to recovery. But, there’s a catch, and it has to do with how antibiotics work. About 70% of your immune response takes place in your digestive tract. So when you take an antibiotic, it goes through your system and kills off all the invading bacteria. The thing is, it also kills off your native bacteria, the ones needed to keep digestion smooth, prevent constipation, and protect your body from aggressive and invading bacteria.

As the Harvard Medical School reports, it takes 6 weeks for your body to recover from an antibiotic. During this time, your gut is a vacant neighborhood just waiting for someone to move in. While friendly bacteria like Lactobacilli and Bifidobacteria can replenish the gut during this time, you’re at a much higher risk for more illness and unwanted bacteria colonizing your intestinal tract. I’m certainly not suggesting you avoid antibiotics, but I am suggesting your take steps for preventing disruption of your intestinal flora at all times.

Here’s What to Do

For the best and fastest recovery while taking antibiotics, you need to get plenty of probiotics through food or a probiotic supplement. Before you start with the probiotics, you first need to cut out refined and processed sugars. Disease-causing bacteria and fungi, like Candida, gobble up these sugars and reproduce much faster.

Two options is adding a probiotic supplement or probiotic-rich foods into your day. Fermented foods like yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, and kimchi are loaded with probiotics. These will help restore the necessary bacteria in your intestinal tract to restore proper digestion and keep out the nasty bacteria that can lead to illness. That brings us to the last step: take prebiotics, like inulin and oligosaccharides found in fruits, vegetables, and plants. These types of dietary fiber feed the bacteria you’re getting with your probiotics. This speeds the recovery of the health-promoting bacteria of your digestive tract.

A 2014 study reported subjects taking prebiotics restored bifidobacterium levels faster than those taking placebo after all subjects had taken Amoxicillin. [2] A combination of prebiotics and probiotics taken during antibiotic therapy restores essential levels of important gut bacteria, prevents nasty ones from taking over your system, and encourages faster healing.

This article originally appeared at Global Healing Center.
 
I was just reading today about minocyxline. I've been on it for aas related acne for almost 5 years straight! I cut my dose in half, 100 once a day rather than twice. I am going to ween myself off it over the next few weeks. Good read man, thanks.
 
Skunx said:
I was just reading today about minocyxline. I've been on it for aas related acne for almost 5 years straight! I cut my dose in half, 100 once a day rather than twice. I am going to ween myself off it over the next few weeks. Good read man, thanks.


My pleasure sir.Glad it helped.Good luck with the weening man.
 
Always a good idea to consume.yogurt
 
lith56bigguy said:
wife is a 20 year plus icu nurse and she laughed when she read this.......

In what regards lith? Ive read a plethora of data on the benefits of gut health and also what the negative impact of it being out of whack can be.Ive also read tons of research on how harmful antibiotics can be and how they are so very over prescribed,which IMHO,is where the real issues come into play.

I truly am curious as to her thoughts on this.No sarcasm at all.What did she find incorrect?
 

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