Poo Fighters

Transplanting beneficial microorganisms from a healthy intestinal tract into an ailing one can work miracles.

Bacteria Illustration

Weekly Newsletter

The best of The Saturday Evening Post in your inbox!

SUPPORT THE POST

Bacteria Illustration

Sorry about the bad pun, but we’re talking about, um, fecal transplants. Recently published research in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that for a certain intransigient intestinal ailment, transplanting beneficial microorganisms from a healthy intestinal tract into an ailing one can work miracles.

In the study, fecal transplants quickly cured 15 of 16 people of a debilitating illness caused by a very nasty and stubborn bacteria called Clostridium difficile that antibiotics couldn’t cure. The results drive home the importance of maintaining a balanced and diverse microbiota.

For the transplant, donor feces were blended into a potion that was ported into the patient’s intestine via a tube down the throat. Some patients felt better within a day, and enrollment was halted early because the transplant group fared so much better than a control group.

“The study helps to scientifically prove the high success rates of fecal transplants that we see in our patients: This therapy works,” says Dr. Colleen R. Kelly, a gastroenterologist with the Women’s Medicine Collaborative in Providence, Rhode Island, who was not part of the original trial. As for the unpleasant-sounding methodology, pinpointing the curative strains may someday lead to therapeutic pills or products containing them.

Read more about good bacteria in “Why We Need Germs,” March/April 2013.

Become a Saturday Evening Post member and enjoy unlimited access. Subscribe now