C. difficile spores. Getting a “fecal transplant” sounds like a pretty icky proposition. But according to data presented at a meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology, the procedure seems to work very well to treat recurrent bouts of Clostridium difficile infection . To understand the appeal of a fecal transplant, you’ve got to understand the problem it’s addressing. As the WSJ’s Informed Patient column has reported , C. diff infections can occur as an unintended consequence of taking antibiotics; the gut’s bacterial balance gets thrown out of whack, and C. diff grows out of control. Treatment with antibiotics or probiotics doesn’t always fix the problem. Enter the fecal transplant! It’s a very simple idea — re-introduce a healthy menagerie of bacteria into the gut — but the mechanics can produce squeamishness. Lawrence Brandt , emeritus chief of the division of gastroenterology at Montefiore Medical Center/Albert Einstein College of Medicine, has been colonoscopically infusing filtered stool into the colons of patients since 1999. He takes a freshly passed stool specimen from a donor (usually a spouse/partner or relative), grinds it up, and filters out solid material through gauze pads. Once it’s suspended in a sterile saline solution, the solution is infused
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Fecal Transplants Have the Ick Factor, But Research Suggests They Work


John


