Publication | Open Access
Probiotics and prebiotics: can regulating the activities of intestinal bacteria benefit health?
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Citations
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References
1999
Year
Large BowelDysbiosisDigestive TractProbioticsIntestinal BacteriaPrebioticsProbioticMicrobiome BiologyMicrobiota FunctionLactic Acid BacteriaGut MicrobiologyFood MicrobiologyMicrobial InteractionsIntestinal MicrobiotaColonic MicrofloraAntimicrobial ResistanceHealth SciencesFood FermentationMicrobiomeMicrobiota StructureFood FunctionMicrobiologyGut BarrierMedicine
The colonic microflora is important to health. The growth and metabolism of the many individual bacterial species inhabiting the large bowel depend primarily on the substrates available to them, most of which come from the diet. 1 2 This has led to attempts to modify the structure and metabolic activities of the community through diet—using probiotics and prebiotics. Probiotics are live microbial food supplements. The best known are the lactic acid bacteria and bifidobacteria, which are widely used in yoghurts and other dairy products (fig 1). These organisms are non-pathogenic and non-toxigenic,retain viability during storage, and survive passage through the stomach and small bowel. Prebiotics are non-digestible food ingredients which selectively stimulate the growth or activities, or both, of lactobacilli or bifidobacteria in the colon, thereby improving health. #### Summary points Fig 1 A selection of “bio” yoghurts available in supermarkets Since probiotics do not permanently colonise the host, they need to be ingested regularly for any health promoting properties to persist. Most studies on probiosis have been observational rather than mechanistic, and thus the processes responsible for many probiotic phenomena are seldom explained. Some probiotics are members of the normal colonic microflora and are not …
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