Authors
Danielle Wolvers, Jean-Michel Antoine, Eveliina Myllyluoma, Juergen Schrezenmeir, Hania Szajewska, Ger T Rijkers
Publication date
2010/3/1
Source
The Journal of nutrition
Volume
140
Issue
3
Pages
698S-712S
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The rationale for the use of probiotics in the management of infectious diseases is supported by their potential to influence and stabilize the composition of gut microbiota, enhance colonization resistance, and modulate immune function parameters. A literature review was conducted to determine the efficacy of using probiotics in selected infections: 1) infectious diarrhea in infants and children, 2) traveler's diarrhea, 3) necrotizing enterocolitis in infants, 4) Helicobacter pylori infection, 5) respiratory tract infections in adults and children, 6) ear, nose, and throat infections, and 7) infectious complications in surgical and critically ill patients. The different types of infections that have been subject to clinical studies with different probiotics obviously prevent any generic conclusions. Furthermore, the lack of consistency among studies focusing on 1 specific infection, in study design, applied probiotic strains, outcome …
Total citations
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