Abstract:
Introduction: Fecal transplant or transplant of fecal microbiota (TFM) is an innovative
technique of transplantation of fecal bacteria from a healthy person to a sick one. For the first time it
was used by experts from the University Hospital "Hadassah"(Ierusalim) to treat certain intestinal
diseases, especially the ones caused by the bacterium Clostridium difficile. This microorganism is found
in intestines of people of different ages, but the increasing number of these bacteria inhibits the normal
micro-flora of the intestinal tract inside healthy people. When the optimum balance in the gut is disrupted
(often as a result of antibiotic treatment), there is a rapid increase of Clostridium difficile, which leads
to diseases.C.difficile is estimated to be responsible for at least one fourth of antibiotic-Associated
diarrheas in hospitalized patients. Studies that have been done in this field have contributed to the
progress in getting known the TFM. The recovery of patients were successful in more than 90% after
the manipulations which were performed, these being recognized as the most important scientific
achievements of 2012.
Material and methods: The presentation represents an extensive literature review based on
previously completed research; we have conducted its own study and concluded the benefit of this
procedure for the treatment of patients with intestinal diseases.
The result of discussion: There are three antimicrobial drugs most commonly implicated in
infection with C.difficile, clindamycin, ampicillin and the cephalosporin. First-line antimicrobial drugs
for C. difficile treatment are metronidazole and vancomycin; however, recent data suggest that
metronidazole is losing its efficacy and expert suggests to use more radical methods for treatment such
as transplant of fecal microbiota. Transplantation can be provided through a variety of methodologies,
either to the lower proximal, lower distal, or upper gastrointestinal tract. A research conducted in 2008
by T. Brodie, an Australian gastroenterologist, and other scientists, allowed to extend the list of
indications for TFM. In addition to the treatment of intestine pathologies, faecal transplant was used to
treat diseases like Parkinson's disease, diabetes mellitus, and insulin resistance, rheumatoid arthritis,
obesity, and multiple sclerosis.
Conclusion: Unfortunately C.difficile infection increases incidence, severity and recurrence
rates, particularly in the last several years. From 1996 to 2010, the reported incidence of CDI cases in
acute care hospitals in the U.S indicates an increase from 139,000 to 349,000. Up to now the intestinal
microbiota has been generally inaccessible to scientific researches because most of them were hardly
cultivated in the laboratory. The transplant of fecal microbiota proves to be an inexpensive and very
effective intervention in intestinal diseases treatment. According to literature data, about 90% of patients
are cured, so this procedure represented a real success in modern medicine.
Key-words: Fecal microbiota, Clostridium difficile, recurent infection, intestinal disease.
Description:
Department of Microbiology, Virology and Immunology, Nicolae Testemitanu State University of Medicine and Pharmacy, Chisinau, Republic of Moldova, The 6th International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors