Of
the 43 cystic fibrosis patients UF researchers studied, 19 produced
too much oxalate, and all 19 lacked the intestinal bacterium,
Peck said. In contrast, the few patients who were colonized -
even with low levels of the organism - had normal oxalate levels.
The study participants, all residing in Germany and ranging in
age from 3 to 39, had cystic fibrosis and showed no signs of an
intestinal malabsorption problem. Their results were compared
with findings from 21 healthy volunteers ages 4 to 44.
O.
formigenes appears to break down calcium oxalate before it can
form crystals that evolve into kidney stones, he said. Oxalate
is found in high concentrations in many foods, including asparagus,
tea, broccoli, peanut butter, spinach and chocolate.
When
oxalate levels are kept low, it is easier for the body to excrete
the substance through the kidneys. But if there is more oxalate
than can be dissolved in the urine, the crystals settle out and
form stones.
Peck
and colleagues suspect prolonged antibiotic use and other high-dose
drug regimens may preclude natural colonization with the intestinal
bacterium, or may irreversibly destroy the colonies. Most infants
naturally acquire the intestinal bacterium from their environment
between the ages of 9 months to 1 year, and by 6 to 8 years of
age almost all healthy children are colonized.
Researchers
reviewed study participants' medical records and discovered
that among the patients, 29 different antibiotic regimens had
been used, and many patients were likely to be on other medications
as well. Only one patient had not been treated with antibiotics
- the only person who tested strongly positive for O. formigenes.
"When
we investigated the potential reasons for the loss of the bacterium,
we already had some evidence that this bacterium is very sensitive
to antibiotic treatment, so an analysis of these patients in terms
of their antibiotic treatment was performed," Peck said. "It
appears that ceftazidime and trimethroprim-sulfmethoxazole, two
broad-spectrum antibiotics often used against a variety of bacteria,
are highly toxic to this bacterium, as well. We were able to show
that all the patients who had taken either ceftazidime or trimethroprim-sulfmethoxazole
lacked Oxalobacter.
"What
these findings tell us is that the presence of this bacterium
may be very beneficial, but because of the use of antibiotic treatment,
often because of overprescription, we can alter our normal intestinal
bacterial flora," he said. "If we extrapolate these results,
then a lot of children are placed on antibiotics for very minor
things and may lose their normal flora, for example Oxalobacter
formigenes, possibly placing them at higher risk for having complications
later on."
The
study is fascinating because researchers are finding similar data
with patients who are suffering from kidney stone formation as
a primary disease, Peck said.
Kidney
stones, one of the most common disorders of the urinary tract,
have plagued mankind throughout time. Reference is made to those
"laboring under the stone" in the Hippocratic oath, and
scientists have even detected evidence of kidney stones in an
Egyptian mummy more than 7,000 years old. Today, kidney stones
afflict 5 to 10 percent of the population worldwide. Each year,
nearly 1 million Americans suffer from painful kidney stone episodes.
Recent UF Health Science Center news releases on intestinal bacterium
are also available on the UF Health Science Center Office of Public
Information website, www.vpha.health.ufl.edu.
Note:
This story has been adapted
from a news release on intestinal bacterium issued by University
of Florida for journalists and other members of the public. If
you wish to quote from any part of this story, please credit University
of Florida as the original source. The story was taken from Science
Daily, www.sciencedaily.com.
Comments:
This story, while it is about cystic fibrosis patients,
adds to our understanding of the relationship between intestinal
bacterium and antiobiotics.
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