Antibiotics Gut Flora Food Intolerance and Disease

Cattle Are Finished by Selective Killing of Gut Flora.  The Sickened Animals Store Fat that Grills Great.  People Get Metabolic Syndrome.
The likening of modern humans to potatoes sacked out on a couch is misleading.  The obesity epidemic linked to diets of processed foods more closely resembles the stumbling progression of cattle to abattoir.  Antibiotics and diet systematically lead in both feedlot and food court to gut dysbiosis, immune system failure, hormone disruption, rampant fat accumulation, physical inactivity, depression and the modern suite of chronic diseases.  Healthcare costs escalate, but vet bills, in contrast, are forestalled by a captive bolt pistol.
Background Observations
  • Antibiotics kill bacteria and not humans, because the bacteria have different machinery for making proteins, nucleic acids and cell walls.
  • Antibiotics kill bacterial pathogens and not viruses or fungi.
  • Antibiotics kill helpful bacteria in the gut (gut flora) even more readily than pathogens.
  • Antibiotics are used in meat production to alter gut flora to change animal metabolism;  e.g. cattle treated with antibiotics gain fat.  Protection from disease is secondary.
  • Simple diet means simple gut flora.  Processed foods are simplified foods that simplify gut flora.
  • Probiotics can replace only a small fraction of the gut flora diversity.
  • Gut bacteria control the immune system development in the lining of the gut.
  • Chronic antibiotic use permanently simplifies gut flora and compromises the immune system.
  • The appendix stores gut bacteria as a reserve to replenish gut flora following diarrhea.
  • Diseases based on inflammation and immune system intolerance result from gut dysbiosis (inadequate gut bacteria).
Antibiotics Kill Good Bacteria
This is a rant about antibiotics, not about humane actions.  Humane actions are not the point here, since I am talking about health care and not treatment of agricultural animals.  I am pleading for the rights of gut flora everywhere and antibiotics are the casual killers.  Compromised gut flora is collateral damage in attempting to eliminate bacteria characterized as pathogens.  Every time the pediatrician treats the mother by acceding to her pleas for an antibiotic prescription to silence a howling ear ache and get a good night’s sleep, or the dermatologist treats teen acne with antibiotics, billions and billions of domesticated bacteria die.
Constipation Is a Sign
Countless hours are wasted waiting, because antibiotic-depleted gut flora cannot hydrate and form normal stools.  Probiotics are gulped down, but they supply only a handful of the hundreds of bacterial species that are needed for health.  Yeasts and other fungi that are naturally resistant to antibiotics quickly replace the lost beneficial bacteria in the gut, vagina and on other body surfaces.  Surcease for simple sorrows leads to lingering and lasting laminations.  Don’t mess with mother nurture.
Damage of Antibiotic Use Is Slow
Most of the impact of antibiotic annihilation of bacteria normally present in humans is unobserved, because the deleterious effects lag months behind the initial treatment.  After all, cattle treated with antibiotics to restructure their gut flora to induce bovine obesity, appear to thrive as they rapidly gain weight and avoid symptoms of infectious diseases.  Humans on antibiotics also display fewer dental and incidental infections.  Constipation is not a high price to pay for a better mirror image.  
Antibiotics Compromise the Immune System
Unfortunately, allergies, autoimmune diseases, degenerative diseases and cancers are not usually linked to prior use of antibiotics.  There is no evidence that gut flora recovers  after antibiotic treatment, but constipation as a consequence of chronic antibiotic use is a common indicator of gut dysbiosis, collapse of normal gut flora bacterial communities.  The harbingers of inflammatory and degenerative diseases are present, but are usually discounted, because they are a common consequence of the Western diet.
Food Intolerance Reveals Inadequacies in Gut Flora
Food intolerance is a sign of depleted gut flora diversity.  Gut flora have hundreds of genes that can break down a huge diversity of polysaccharides derived from plant cell walls.  Gut flora of Japanese who routinely consume kelp have specialized enzymes to hydrolyze unusual algal sulfated polysaccharides.  Essentially all of the polysaccharides in plant fiber can be consumed by bacteria in the anaerobic environment of the colon.  Inability of individuals to digest particular food components usually results from a deficiency of the gut flora and an indication of a history of dietary simplification and antibiotic use.  Lactose intolerance, for example, results from depletion of lactose-degrading bacteria from the gut flora and can be remedied by simply eating lactose with probiotics for a couple of weeks.  Gut flora can adapt, but they need persistent exposure to diverse, i.e. non-processed, food.
Antibiotic Allergies Are Natural
Allergies develop from a combination of inflammation and compromised immunological tolerance.  Inflammation heightens processing of antigens for presentation to the immune systems, whereas loss of immunological tolerance means that aggressive immune responses are inadequately controlled.  Thus, innocuous environmental molecules are incorrectly recognized as pathogen components.  Allergies to antibiotics, such as penicillin, make sense, because the antibiotic is used to treat inflammatory infections and the antibiotic treatment eliminates the gut bacteria that are needed to develop gut lymphocytes (Tregs) to produce tolerance.  Antibiotics lay the foundation for immune system dysfunction that is central to many chronic diseases.
Healthy gut flora and a healthy immune system require:
  • avoidance of antibiotics
  • systematic (not simply eating yogurt) rebuilding of gut flora following diarrhea or antibiotic use; lack of an appendix means gut flora reservoir is gone
  • eating a variety of vegetables; avoiding processed food
  • using herbs and spices
  • don’t overdo hygiene; gut flora diversity derives from bacteria that you eat and those that rub off acquaintances
  • eat seasonally to increase diversity

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