Tag Archives: bacteria and the digestive tract

How probiotics work #3 Inhibition of pathogenic bacteria

Probiotics deliver benefit in a variety of different ways some of which are better understood than others. Competitive exclusion has already been covered elsewhere on this blog and is the process whereby ‘good’ bacteria crowd out the ‘bad’ or pathogenic bacteria through sheer weight of numbers. Also previously mentioned is the complicated process of immunomodulation whereby some probiotic bacteria interact with the human immune system to reduce inflammation and so improve the symptoms of certain digestive conditions. Continue reading

How probiotics work #2 Immunomodulation

We generally associate our digestive tract with nutrition; the part of the body where food is absorbed and from which waste products are excreted. This is of course correct, however there are other equally and in some cases more important functions that our digestive tract is responsible for, and which bacteria including probiotics play a key role in. Continue reading

Which probiotic bacteria work best?

For a bacterium to be called ‘probiotic’ it must be alive and deliver benefit to the host species, this is a definition set down by the World Health Organisation (WHO). Any bacteria which do not deliver benefit are not probiotic, similarly it is wrong to refer to freeze-dried, deactived bacteria as probiotic. They only become probiotic if they return to life and begin to divide and confer benefit.

An alternative question to the one in the title would be to ask ‘which strains of probiotic bacteria confer most benefit to the host?’ Continue reading