This Article is From Sep 26, 2018

Can Antibiotics Do More Harm Than Good?

Researchers examined "resident" bacteria, their fatty acids and their effect on certain types of white blood cells that combat infections in the mouth.

Can Antibiotics Do More Harm Than Good?

Scientists have long known that overuse of antibiotics can do more harm than good.

Highlights

  • Overuse of antibiotics can do more harm than good
  • Antibiotics can kill short-chain fatty acids produced by body's own good
  • Body's microbes are effective in maintaining immune cells

A new research shows that the body's microbes are effective in maintaining immune cells and killing certain oral infections. A team of researchers at Case Western Reserve University found that antibiotics actually kill the "good" bacteria, keeping infection and inflammation at bay. Scientists have long known that overuse of antibiotics can do more harm than good. For example, overuse can cause antibiotic resistance. But research into this phenomenon in oral health was uncharted territory. Researchers examined "resident" bacteria, their fatty acids and their effect on certain types of white blood cells that combat infections in the mouth.

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Antibiotics can kill short-chain fatty acids produced by body's own good bacteria.
Photo Credit: iStock

Specifically, they looked at the "short-term maintenance" of Tregs and Th-17 cells in fighting fungal infections, such as Candida, in a laboratory setting. They found that those natural defenses were very effective in reducing infection and unwanted inflammation-- and antibiotics can prevent such natural defenses. "We set out to find out what happens when you don't have bacteria to fight a fungal infection," said Pushpa Pandiyan, a researcher.

"What we found was that antibiotics can kill short-chain fatty acids produced by body's own good bacteria. We have good bacteria doing good work every day, why kill them. As is the case with many infections, if you leave them alone, they will leave on their own." Pandiyan said that the study could have broader implications on the protective effects of "resident microbiota" in other types of infections.

The findings appeared in the Journal of Frontiers in Microbilogy.

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