Our First Peer-Reviewed Journal Article

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Journal of Restorative Medicine - Vol 9 No 1 (2020)

Fecal Transplant: How an Ancient Therapy Is Finding a New Use in Today’s Antibiotic-Resistant Era Andrea McBeth, ND and Piper Dobner, ND, MS

Abstract

Fecal transplant refers to any method of delivery of healthy human stool to the colon of a recipient. This therapy is now gaining standard-of-care designation in the United States, Australia, and many parts of Europe for treating resistant Clostridium difficile infection. This literature review describes fecal transplant protocols. It highlights the variety of techniques used to screen stool donors; prepare and deliver treatment; and how, despite these variations, safety and efficacy remain high. It highlights the various ways to best mitigate safety while also recommending the direction in which clinical and research communities can move to continue to provide access to fecal microbiota transplant in a cost-effective manner.

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Exercise and the Microbiome

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Flora Medicine’s Response to the FDA Alert Regarding Fecal Transplant