Health for a lifetime >>>> Treatment after antibiotics
Treatment after antibiotics.
Oddly enough it sounds, but after antibiotic treatment, treatment is necessary again ... What is treated after antibiotics?
Antibiotics have entered human life as a necessary and, in most cases, the only possible measure to combat bacterial infection. Many lives would have been lost had the scientists not made the discovery of penicillins, and behind them the possibility of synthesizing other types of antibacterial substances. Despite the high level of scientific research in the field of protection against bacteria, antibiotics remain in the first place in the treatment of many infectious bacterial diseases.
But antibiotic treatment is a necessary measure and it is unsafe, since antibacterial drugs kill not only harmful microorganisms, but also quite peaceful representatives of bacteria that live with a person all his life and "work" for the benefit of his health.
Any treatment with antibacterial drugs is a blow to the human microbiocenosis, and it is the microbiocenosis that needs subsequent recovery after antibiotic treatment. A balanced microbiocenosis is a guarantee of healthy immunity, and an efficient immunity means a protected organism.
After antibiotic treatment, it is required to take preparations containing artificially grown representatives of the intestinal bacterial microflora, which suffers from antibiotic therapy to a greater extent. The most vulnerable to antibiotics are lactic acid bacteria (bifidobacteria and lactobacilli), and it is their colonies that need to be restored.
Treatment after antibiotics is carried out by courses of taking probiotic cultures (beneficial bacteria). Immediately after antibiotic therapy, drugs containing lactobacilli, is taken. These bacteria are more resistant to antibacterial drugs, and will be able to multiply in conditions of residual antibiotic action. After 2-3 months, they begin a course of taking bifidobacteria, which are more sensitive to antibacterial agents.
In some cases, the intake of probiotic cultures is required in the midst of taking the antibacterial drugs themselves. In these cases, drugs containing lactobacilli is taken immediately before meals, and the intake of drugs containing bifidobacteria and an antibiotic is separated by a time interval of three to four hours.
The idea that antibiotics solve all the body's problems is wrong. Antibiotics are quite capable, having solved the problems of the current bacterial infection, create new problems - weakened immune responses to all subsequent attacks of dangerous microorganisms.
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