July 15, 2013

What do probiotics do?

Did you know that there are 20 times more bacteria than cells in your body? In fact, at any one time, you have more bacteria in your body than the total number of people who have ever lived on the planet. So the next time you step on the bathroom scale, you need to remember that 1 pound of that weight is not you at all, but the billions of bugs that live in your gut. This may sound alarming, but many of these organisms are crucial to good health.


A probiotic is an organism which contributes to the health and balance of the
intestinal tract. A probiotic is also referred to as the "friendly", "beneficial", or
"good" bacteria which when ingested acts to maintain a healthy intestinal tract
and help fight illness and disease.
A healthy lower intestine should contain at least 85% friendly bacteria to prevent
the over colonization of disease causing micro-organisms like E. coli and
salmonella. 
Our colon can maintain its health with 15% unfriendly bacteria, if the body contains
 at least 85% probiotic friendly bacteria. Most people have this percentage reversed.
The word "Probiotic" simply means “for life” which explains why these nutrients 
are so important. But if you want the proper scientific definition of a Probiotic here 
it is:

“A live microbial feed supplement, which beneficially affects the host by improving 
its intestinal microbial balance”

New research is establishing how important the supplementation of probiotics can
 be for a variety of conditions. Probiotics enhance the immune system by favorably
 altering the gut micro-ecology and preventing unfriendly organisms from gaining 
a foothold in the body. They prevent the overgrowth of yeast and fungus and 
produce substances that can lower cholesterol.

Probiotics are widely recommended for the treatment of Candida - a fungal infection
 - because they establish large, healthy populations of friendly bacteria that compete
 with the Candida that is trying to take up residence in the intestine. Probiotics are 
also essential in the treatment and prevention of thrush, vaginal yeast infections, 
and athlete's foot. Good health depends fundamentally upon the more than 400 
types of friendly, symbiotic bacteria that inhabit the digestive tract.
 

Why Do We Need Probiotics?

Two of the most damaging substances to the delicate intestinal flora balance are 
chlorine and sodium fluoride, present in most treated city water, and thus also
 present in most beverages which one gets at restaurants. The drinking of alcoholic 
beverages also contributes to the destruction of the intestinal flora. Medical 
antibiotics, birth control pills and many other allopathic drugs cause damage to the
 intestinal flora and to the tissue in the intestinal wall.

Poor eating habits, chlorinated drinking water, stress and disease and the use of antibiotics in food production as well as in medical treatments can wreak havoc in the gastrointestinal tract by destroying good bacteria and allowing undesirable bacteria to multiply. When the ratio of good bacteria to bad is lowered, problems begin to arise such as excessive gas, bloating, constipation, intestinal toxicity and poor absorption of nutrients.
probiotics and the digestive system
While it's true that non-beneficial bacteria are naturally occurring in the intestinal
tract, problems begin when their growth goes unchecked and probiotics play an 
especially important role in keeping in check the pathogenic bacteria that cause 
disease.

A good probiotic supplement will contain millions and millions of live bacteria to
 bolster and replenish levels of the health promoting good bugs in your digestive 
tract. Once there, these probiotic reinforcements join forces with the existing 
friendly bacteria to help inhibit the growth of more harmful microbes.
This, in turn, will help improve the digestion and absorption of your food and 
stimulate and support the immune system.

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