A recent study has found that probiotics can aid recovery from spinal cord injury. Gut bacteria are microorganisms that are believed to provide health benefits when consumed. They are usually added to yoghurts or taken as food supplements. The “good” or “friendly” bacteria are thought to restore the natural balance of bacteria in your gut when it has been disrupted by an illness or treatment.
Spinal cord injury can be very debilitating and costly.
According to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center, in the United States alone;
Research now shows that probiotics is one the simplest and affordable hope for recovery for people suffering from spinal cord injuries. Spinal cord injuries cause major changes in the bacteria living inside the gut. The changes contribute to the cascade of physical problems that cause many people to quickly decline after the injury.
Using mice as an experiment the effect of spinal cord injuries is demonstrated. A research was carried out in New York led by Philip G. Popovich of Ohio state Univesity and Kristina Kigerl
The trillions of microbes that exist in the gastrointestinal tract have emerged as pivotal regulators of human development and physiology. Spinal cord injuries cause dramatic shifts in the types of bacteria normally found in the gut resulting in unhealthy bacterial balance in the gut called dysbiosis which can cause neurological disease.
The injuries cause the bacteria to leave the gut and migrate to other issues in the body. In the experiment mice who had dysbiosis before their spinal cord injuries before their spinal cord injuries did not recover as well and had problems related to their spinal cord injury.
The dysbiosis also increased spinal inflammation and activated immune cells found with the gut.
In an effort to restore a healthy gut microbiota and block the detrimental effects of dysbiosis after a spinal cord injury, the mice was treated with VSL#3, a medical grade probiotic , starting immediately after the injury and continuing daily.
It was found out that the treatment improved neurological recovery and reduced spinal cord pathology while simultaneously increasing gut- associated regulatory T cells.
The probiotics, containing large numbers of lactic acid producing bacteria activated a regulatory T cells, a type of immune cell that can suppress inflammation, these cells may prevent damage to the spinal cord after injury. The probiotic bacteria may also boost spinal cord recovery by secreting factors that enhance neuronal growth and function.
Yet still in other previous studies, there is evidence that probiotics may aid in preventing and treating antibiotic-associated diarrhoea and/or Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhoea in patients with spinal cord injury
Probiotics are one of the many possible approaches for treating or at least reducing the detrimental effects of dysbiosis after spinal cord injury.
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