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PROBIATICS AND PREBIOTICS by Sue Arons
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Mon, Apr 21st, 2008 |
| PROBIATICS AND PREBIOTICS by Sue Arons
Probiotics and Prebiotic, Essential for Good Health
When a dog or puppy is given large doses of antibiotics, these pharmaceuticals kill not only the harmful bacteria, but at the same time it also kills off the healthy bacteria too. To be at optimal health a dog, and humans need a ratio of 85% lactobacillus (healthy bacteria) and 15 % coliform bacteria (the bad bacteria) , unfortunately the majority of times the ratio is switched.. What causes these numbers to be the opposite, gut damage due to overuse of antibiotics and steroids, stress, parasites, intestinal infections and old age. How can we fix this problem..Probiotics and Prebiotics.
By adding probiotics in the form of lactobacillus acidophilus and lactobacillus bifidus in a supplement to a animal's diet you can reverse those numbers, this therapy will return your flora with continued use back to a healthier balance. Both lacto and bifidus promote proper digestion, help normalize the bowel function, and helps to reduce gas and candida overgrowth. All this keep immunity balanced. When on a probiotic regimen, the animals body will be more resistant to infection . To optimize total health the gut also needs prebiotics, these are non digestible, complex carbohydrates .These stimulate growth of beneficial gut organisms, or Fructooligosacchides or FOS. FOS for the most part is indigestible and therefore acts as a non-digestible fiber in the diet. This is because the human does not have the enzymes to break down the FOS as it travels down the digestive tract. When the FOS reaches the large intestine and the colon, the bacteria that are found there start to break down the FOS. These bacteria have the enzymes needed to break down FOS. Bifido bacteria have been reported to use FOS. It is believed that foods that promote bifido bacteria growth are good for the health. How exactly the FOS exerts its beneficial effects is not certain. However, increasing the numbers of beneficial bacteria in the lower intestine, changes in the pH of the intestinal contents, together with increases in enzyme levels that may be related to the detoxification of carcinogens in the diet all have been cited as reasons to increase the FOS levels in the diet. What we do know is that prebiotics are given with probiotics for a more lasting effect.. This is a little write up about fos/ prebiotics tend to starve the pathogenic bacteria.
Recently there has been a lot of attention paid to the carbohydrate portion of the diet. The word fiber has become a rallying point for people looking for ways to combat cardiovascular disease and several types of intestinal cancer. However, another carbohydrate is also getting a lot of publicity. Fructooligosacchides or FOS are a carbohydrate that many feel should become a greater portion of the diet.
FOS are chain polymers of the sugar fructose that are found in a variety of foods. The sugar units can be linked in a single straight chain or can be a chain with side branches. In many cases small amounts of glucose are also contained in the chain. Chemically, FOS is difficult to define, because the length of the fructose chains can vary from source to source. Therefore a FOS analysis of a food may report the total of several closely related compounds. Inulin is an example of a longer chained compound that is considered a FOS. The shorter (lower molecular weight) compounds tend to have a sweet taste.
The size and complexity of the FOS molecule gives it desirable characteristics. Although the simple sugars fructose and glucose are quickly absorbed into the body by the intestines, FOS for the most part is indigestible and therefore acts as a non-digestible fiber in the diet. This is because the human does not have the enzymes to break down the FOS as it travels down the digestive tract. When the FOS reaches the large intestine and the colon, the bacteria that are found there start to break down the FOS. These bacteria have the enzymes needed to break down FOS. Bifido bacteria have been reported to use FOS. It is believed that foods that promote bifido bacteria growth are good for the health.
How exactly the FOS exerts its beneficial effects is not certain. However, increasing the numbers of beneficial bacteria in the lower intestine, changes in the pH of the intestinal contents, together with increases in enzyme levels that may be related to the detoxification of carcinogens in the diet all have been cited as reasons to increase the FOS levels in the diet |
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