Indian Journal of Urology (Jan 2008)

Prevention and treatment of urinary tract infection with probiotics: Review and research perspective

  • D Borchert,
  • L Sheridan,
  • A Papatsoris,
  • Z Faruquz,
  • J M Barua,
  • I Junaid,
  • Y Pati,
  • F Chinegwundoh,
  • N Buchholz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4103/0970-1591.40604
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 2
pp. 139 – 144

Abstract

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The spiralling costs of antibiotic therapy, the appearance of multiresistant bacteria and more importantly for patients and clinicians, unsatisfactory therapeutic options in recurrent urinary tract infection (RUTI) calls for alternative and advanced medical solutions. So far no sufficient means to successfully prevent painful and disabling RUTI has been found. Even though long-term oral antibiotic treatment has been used with some success as a therapeutic option, this is no longer secure due to the development of bacterial resistance. One promising alternative is the use of live microorganisms (probiotics) to prevent and treat recurrent complicated and uncomplicated urinary tract infection (UTI). The human normal bacterial flora is increasingly recognised as an important defence to infection. Since the advent of antibiotic treatment five decades ago, a linear relation between antibiotic use and reduction in pathogenic bacteria has become established as medical conventional wisdom. But with the use of antibiotics the beneficial bacterial flora hosted by the human body is destroyed and pathogenic bacteria are selectively enabled to overgrow internal and external surfaces. The benign bacterial flora is crucial for body function and oervgrowth with pathogenic microorganisms leads to illness. Thus the concept of supporting the human body′s normal flora with live microorganisms conferring a beneficial health effect is an important medical strategy.

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