Friday, May 3, 2013
Skin Probiotics Offer Best Defense Against MRSA Infections
Posted on 12:11 AM by Unknown
http://www.activistpost.com/2013/05/skin-probiotics-offer-best-defense.html#more
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Skin Probiotics Offer Best Defense Against MRSA Infections
Case Adams
Activist Post
Researchers from the University of California at San Diego have determined that healthy skin bacteria serve as defense mechanisms against infection, and can fight off even the sometimes deadly MRSA infection.
This of course explains why not everyone who comes into contact with the methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) bacteria – or any other skin infective agent for that matter – becomes infected.
The researchers tested a typical skin (probiotic) bacteria Propionibacterium acnes against MRSA in several settings. The researchers conducted laboratory studies by growing cultures of Propionibacterium acnes with and without their preferred food medium of glycerol, and tested these varying cultures against a species of MRSA bacteria known to be one of the most fatal – the USA300 species.
The research found those Propionibacterium acnes cultures with greater glycerol mediums significantly inhibited the growth of the MRSA bacteria. Those Propionibacterium acnes mediums with less glycerol had less resistance against the MRSA bacteria.
Propionibacterium acnes bacteria feed off of the glycerol produced by the body's sebaceous glands.
One of the central mechanisms of Propionibacterium acnes' ability to inhibit MRSA was through a biochemical called propionic acid. The researchers isolated the propionic acid from the skin probiotic and found that propionic acid in itself significantly inhibited the colonization of MRSA.
Propionic acid is normally present on the skin of healthy persons.
The researchers then tested the ability of Propionibacterium acnes bacteria to prevent infection on the skin of mice. The Propionibacterium acnes bacteria cultures significantly inhibited MRSA infections – at even greater degrees than within the laboratory. The researchers also found that the Propionibacterium acnes bacteria tended to colonize into and around any wounds on the skin of the mice – thereby preventing MRSA infection into the wound.
The research discovered this ability to prevent MRSA infection on the skin and into wounds was due not only to the Propionibacterium acnes' ability to inhibit MRSA biochemically: Propionibacterium acnes along with another skin probiotic, Staphylococcus epidermidis, stimulate the release of the body's own immunity mechanisms through activating Toll-like receptors.
The human skin contains about ten times the number of probiotic bacteria than skin cells. Propionibacterium acnes bacteria make up approximately half of the total probiotic bacteria living on the skin.
Meanwhile antibiotics applied to the skin will produce a die-off of these important skin bacteria – which leaves the skin vulnerable to infection once the antibiotics wear off.
Learn more about probiotics and antibiotics.
Compounding this risk, MRSA and other infective microorganisms are now resistant to many antibiotics. This means that a topically applied antibiotic might kill our skin probiotics while allowing MRSA and other antibiotic-resistant bacterial infections.
Is it a coincidence that hospitals – places where the most antibiotics are applied or prescribed – have the greatest rate of infection of these antibiotic-resistant microorganisms? This of course is why infections of these microorganisms also have been dubbed "hospital acquired infections."
Reference
Shu M, Wang Y, Yu J, Kuo S, Coda A, Jiang Y, Gallo RL, Huang CM. Fermentation of Propionibacterium acnes, a commensal bacterium in the human skin microbiome, as skin probiotics against methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus. PLoS One. 2013;8(2):e55380.
Case Adams is a California Naturopath and holds a Ph.D. in Natural Health Sciences. His focus is upon science-based natural health solutions. He is the author of 25 books on natural health and numerous print and internet articles. His work can be found at http://www.caseadams.com.
This article first appeared at GreenMedInfo. Please visit to access their vast database of articles and the latest information in natural health.
Posted in MRSA, MRSA prevention, Probiotics, Propionibacterium acnes, propionic acid, Skin Probiotic
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