Published
They had something on NPR this morning, saying that they think that's part of the function of the appendix -- it's a reservoir of "good" bacteria to re-seed the colon after something like cholera. Neat idea, but when the guy being interviewed said the "sanitized" fecal material was introduced via enema or "through the nose", meaning a NGT, I thought the host was gonna barf...
Thanks for the link to the previous thread. Good info there. I really find this very interesting as I keep seeing home care patients coming out of the hospital with this problem.
They had something on NPR this morning, saying that they think that's part of the function of the appendix -- it's a reservoir of "good" bacteria to re-seed the colon after something like cholera. Neat idea, but when the guy being interviewed said the "sanitized" fecal material was introduced via enema or "through the nose", meaning a NGT, I thought the host was gonna barf...
Via NGT? Wow!
indigo girl
5,173 Posts
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2011/12/fecal-transplants-work/
This link is from Wired, and the author is a respected science writer also writing on this topic in Scientific American (I like her a whole bunch), and lets face it, C diff is REALLY difficult to treat so this is worth a read. Once you get past the yuck factor, it makes sense...
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=swapping-germs
(Thank you Mike at Avian Flu Diary and Maryn McKenna. This is amazing!)