Contact: Lin Tian
wjg@wjgnet.com
86-105-908-0039
World Journal of Gastroenterology
Supplement of probiotics provides a new therapy for ulcerative colitis
The animal and clinical studies
indicated that gastrointestinal bacteria play an important role in the
development of UC, and the supplement of probiotics was beneficial for
UC. While Because of the specific damage site of UC and the different
colonization of each bacterium, it is suggested that different
probiotics displayed different effects on UC. The obvious effective
strain should be more beneficial for UC.
A research article to be published on January 21, 2009 in the
World Journal of Gastroenterology
addresses this question. The research team led by Professor Lu from the
Department of Gastroenterology, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central
South University compared the effects of four strains of probiotics
which were isolated from healthy human feces by his facility, in order
to find one or two obvious effective strains. This investigation showed
that all four strains of probiotics (
E.feacalis,
L.acidophilus,
C.butyricum and
B.adolescentis)
could relieve symptom of experimental colitis close to SASP on an
evaluation of weight loss, colon length, DAI scores, histological
scores, proteins and mRNA levels of IL-1and Il-4, and MPO. The
effectiveness of
E.faecalis was better than the other three strains.
Compare with the study that the Germ-free IL-10-/- mice developed IBD after they were colonized with a pure culture of
E. faecalis, this study showed that
E. faecalis
had different effects on experimental colitis in wild-type mice. The
experimental results also indicate that there should be some other
inflammatory cytokines involved in the difference of adaptive
immunological mechanisms in experimental colitis between wide-type mice
and the immunodeficient mice except IL-1 and IL-4.
###
Reference: Chen LL, Wang XH, Cui Y, Lian GH, Zhang J, Ouyang CH,
Lu FG. Therapeutic effects of four strains of probiotics onexperimental
colitis in mice. World J Gastroenterol 2009;15(3): 321-327
http://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/15/321.asp
Correspondence
to: Fang-Gen Lu, Professor, Department of Gastroenterology, The Second
Xiangya Hospital of Central South University, Changsha 410011, Hunan
Province, China. lufanggenyao@163.com
Telephone: +86-731-5295888 Fax: +86-731-4807725