Jun 15, 2015

What's All The Fuss About Bacteria?

Short history of the medical revolution, how it created an antibiotic backlash in the form of superbugs and an imminent comeback for natural antibiotics.
By Jan Wellmann / honeycolony.com

The 20th century medical revolution messed up in at least one regard. Instead of wiping out disease, it created a new generation of antibiotic resistant bacteria that cannot be treated. Some doctors talk about the return to the Middle Ages while others barely acknowledge the threat. The real problem stems from how we perceived bacteria from the onset.

To be human is to be bug. We’re built out of 100 trillion tiny creatures, 90 trillion of them are bacterial, while the rest are human cells.

A thousand species of bacteria live in our gut, aiding with digestion, warding off pathogens, maintaining the immune system, synthesizing vitamins, decomposing fecal matter, creating enzymes, harnessing energy from carbohydrates, absorbing fatty acids, and producing hormones. Thousands more perform vital functions on our skin, in our lungs, mouth, hair, organs, blood, and genitalia.

Useful little critters.  It's a shame we declared war on them soon after their discovery.

Confusing The Enemy

"All the water . . . seemed to be alive," observed Dutch scientist Anton Van Leeuwenhoek when he first pointed a microscope on a sample of human plaque in 1683. At first the little critters didn’t seem to represent a threat - they were just everywhere.

Leeuwenhoek’s successor called microbes “worms” and proposed they could transfer disease. “Worms” metamorphosed into “germs”, as the hunt for pathogenic bacteria accelerated.

By the late 1800s, scientists had isolated Black Death, cholera, chlamydia, and a handful of other notorious infectious diseases; and bugs were in for a century of prejudice.

During the revolution of antimicrobials,' the chemical industry introduced disinfectants for our home, antiseptics for our skin, and pesticides for our agriculture. Meanwhile, the medical industry introduced us to synthetic drugs.

The first early 20th century vaccines saved hundreds of millions of lives and brought small pox, diphtheria, tetanus, yellow fever, whooping cough, polio, and measles under control. Vaccines were able to stimulate the body’s immune system against disease, not cure it.

Prevent disease

“If we could intervene in the antagonism between bacteria, it would offer perhaps the greatest hopes for therapeutics,” Louis Pasteur wrote in 1876, expressing the idea of antibiosis (latin for “against life”): the promise for the next generation weaponry against bugs.

"Antibiosis" means the ability to harness one microbe’s defenses against another. It was a big leap from Pasteur’s previous idea of pasteurization, which uses heat to zap bacteria (to conserve consumables). Yet once Pasteur and Robert Koch demonstrated that an airborne bug could inhibit anthrax, scientists began to pursue antagonistic, targetable microbes with a vengeance.

When Alexander Fleming accidentally left his petri dish of staphylococci (common respiratory and skin bacterium in humans) exposed to a penicillin mold in 1928, he witnessed a halo of dead staph bacteria—a signal to the future of antibiotics.

Penicillin, for instance, works by preventing enzymes in bacteria from forming new cell walls. Back then, the spectrum of opportunity was limitless. Tuberculosis, step, staph, typhoid, ulcers, abscesses, food poisonings, surgeries…

Mass production of penicillin began just in time for WWII, where it quickly gained lifesaver reputation by dramatically reducing casualties from wounds and amputations. US pharmaceutical giants Merck, Squibb, Pfizer, and Abbot grew production from 21 billion units in 1943 to 6.8 trillion units in 1945.

Meanwhile, Bayer stumbled on a synthesized dye that was able to cure strep in mice, which they patented without further ado as Prontosil in 1932. The active compound was later identified as sulfanilamide, a 1906 dye industry chemical with an expired patent. This began a “sulfa craze,” with hundreds of manufacturers producing tens of thousands of tons of sulfa as the new miracle panacea. Even American first-aid kits instructed soldiers to sprinkle sulfa on “any open wound.”

Hundreds of antibiotics followed suit over the next half a century, targeting an increasingly common variety of ailments. Bronchitis. Pneumonia. Diarrhea. Sore throat.

Penicillin

False Promises

The medical revolution saved millions of lives – but triggered a microbial blowback.

By developing smart weapons against pathogens we accelerated their evolution over and beyond any other bacterial species. We are responsible for activating a rare breed of hostiles. Bacteria can mutate thousands of times a day to lock in a resistant gene. Only a few of them have to survive and replicate to make their species resistant to a drug - a drug that took about a decade for our best minds to develop.

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The first drug-resistant bacteria surfaced in the early 1950s. Fleming himself had warned about drug resistance in his 1945 Nobel lecture.

“The time may come when penicillin can be bought by anyone in the shops. Then there is the danger that the ignorant man may easily underdose himself and by exposing his microbes to non-lethal quantities of the drug make them resistant. Here is a hypothetical illustration. Mr. X. has a sore throat. He buys some penicillin and gives himself, not enough to kill the streptococci but enough to educate them to resist penicillin. He then infects his wife. Mrs. X gets pneumonia and is treated with penicillin. As the stretococci are now resistant to penicillin the treatment fails. Mrs. X dies.”

George Orwell is a case in point. While finishing his book 1984, Orwell developed an early antibiotic-resistant mutation of M. Tuberculosis in response to repeated prescriptions of Streptomycin. Soon after, he died from lung hemorrhage.

Superbugs didn’t receive much publicity until end of the century, when rampant hospital infections began to be routine. By then, millions of metric tons of antibiotics were routinely fed to both humans and livestock every year. Drug resistance didn’t deter the health care industry from issuing prescriptions at an ever faster rate.

In 2010, doctors prescribed 258 million courses of antibiotics for a population of 309 million people. The biggest visible impact has been in the number of superbug infections, 80 percent of which take place in a health care setting.

The CDC records up to 1.7 million hospital infections per year, out of which at least 20 percent evolve into superbugs. One of the nastiest of these superbugs is the MRSAMethicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureuscan cause widespread infection in vital organs, toxic shock syndrome, before finishing you off with flesh-eating pneumonia.

Two billion people carry staph naturally on their skin, nose or respiratory tract. It can only cause an infection if it enters a wound and the patient has a weak immune system. But because of its wide propagation, its hostile form spreads fast.

Out of 500,000 staph infections in U.S. today, 100,000 today evolve into MRSA, of which at least 20,000 become fatal. The figure is growing fast, one reason being the recommended protocol: more antibiotics.

MRSA today also resides in our livestock - for an obvious reason. Over 63,000 tons of antibiotics (more than the weight of theTitanic) were used in animal husbandry in 2010 alone, or over 80 percent of total consumption. As a result, a 2011 study reported that up to 24 percent of the meat and poultry sold in U.S. grocery stores contained MRSA strains.

Food borne superbugs such as Salmonella and Escheria Coli have also jumped from livestock to humans. The drug-resistant strains of E. coli, for example, which causes urinary tract infections in women, can be traced back to antibiotics in chicken.

Gonorrhea and chlamydia have also developed resistance. Tuberculosis has evolved into a multi-resistant strain.

The pace of proliferation isn’t slowing down. China, Brazil, India, Russia and South Africa are looking at a 100 percent increase in antibiotic consumption by 2030. Antibiotics can be found in 75 percent of liquid soaps, in Band-Aids, cleaners, and topical OTC ointments like Neosporin (also linked to MRSA).

Distribution is also heavily subsidized. 17,000 doctors received $250 million in sales commissions in 2010 from seven pharmaceutical companies alone. A 2013 survey found that doctors prescribe antibiotics to 2/3rds of patients who have symptoms of viral infections like sore throat or bronchitis (with antibiotics that don't cure viral infections).

By 2050, 10 million people per year could die from antimicrobial resistance, according to KPMG and RAND Europe.

Somewhere along the line, industry profit hijacked the Hippocratic Oath - and rigged the game.

It takes a decade to develop a new antibiotic, and five seconds for a staph bacterium to mutate.

Back To Year Zero

”We may look back at the antibiotic era as just a passing phase in the history of medicine, an era when a great natural resource was squandered, and the bugs proved smarter than the scientists” - Cannon G. 1995 

Today’s microbiologists acknowledge the human body as a microbiome - a bacterial cloud living inside another - in which the diversity of species is a sign of health. You can’t just attack one part of the dome without expecting a counterstrike. A Hunter-Gatherer tribe in the Amazon, for example, has a particularly rich microbiome and a natural resistance to disease, without the use of antibiotics. Progressive doctors are shifting focus to bacterial versatility (e.g. fecal transplants) in treating disease.
We should be working with good bacteria not against it. But the meds from the “Us Vs. Bugs” era can still be found in our medicine cabinet, diet, and personal care products.

2015_GutBacteriaA

We continue to attack our own microbiome and the planet’s (an area the size of Panama is wiped out by deforestation every year) at the same time, with uncanny timing. As if the two were tied together.

The drug-resistant backlash is forcing us to look for natural alternatives that were crossed out of medicinal books in the last century. A Science Digest article about silver as a germ fighter, for example, was largely ignored in 1978. Today silver is getting its fame back in modern lab conditions (yes, it even kills superbugs), as are countless other natural antibiotics (see table below).

To the Hunter-Gatherer these medicines come naturally. They know the secret.

About bugs and beings.

Science Digest March 1978 

(Silver, the Mightiest Germ Fighter)

Silver kills over 650 disease-causing organisms, and resistant strains fail to develop. Silver is the best all-round germ fighter we have, and it is absolutely non-toxic! 

Doctors report that, taken internally, it works against syphilis, cholera, malaria, diabetes, and severe burns.

HONEYCOLONY TABLE ON ALTERNATIVE, NATURAL ANTIBIOTICS.

 ITEM  LATIN NAME  INFO  PROS  CONS
American Goldenseal Hydrastis canadensis A perennial herb in the buttercup family native to southeastern Canada and the eastern United States. Often used as a multi-purpose remedy. Treat resistant infections of the GI tract, urinary tract and skin. Also active against most food poisoning bacteria such as E.coli and salmonella. Has the ability to soothe the linings of the mucous membranes of the digestive, respiratory, genitourinary tracts while effectively clearing bacterial invasion. Rarely, side effects can include diarrhea, nausea and skin irritation. It's anitbactrial action can destroy good as well as harmful bacteria if used over a long period of time. Not reccomended for use in children.
Juniper Juniperus spp. Coniferous plants widely distributed throughout the Northern hemisphere, from the arctic south to tropical Africa and to the mountains in central America. Treat resistant infections of the GI tract, urinary tract and skin. Not to be used on a long term basis and to be used sparingly on skin. Not reccommended to use on large, open sking wounds. Increases the need to urinate when taken internally.
Usnea Usnea spp. Pale, greyish/green fructose lichen that grow anchored to trees or shrubs all over the world. Treat resistant infections of the GI tract, urinary tract and skin. Inhibitor of gram-positive bacteria including tuberculosis, streptococcus, and pneumococcus. It functions as an antibiotic by blocking oxidative phosphorylation, an essential part of bacterial metabolism. Has not been fully evaluated but could contain toxicity if used in high dosages. Reccommended as a topical application as opposed to internal.
Honey Apis mellifera Substance produced by bees from the nectar of plants.Considered one of the oldest known wound dressings. Healing properties mentioned in the Bible, the Koran and the Torah. Treat resistant infections of the GI tract, urinary tract and skin. Also active against most food poisoning bacteria such as E.coli and salmonella. Has the ability to soothe the linings of the mucous membranes of the digestive, respiratory, genitourinary tracts while effectively clearing bacterial invasion. Some studies have shown that topical honey works better than systemic/ oral antibiotics in treating infected wounds. Best if organic and raw. Not suitable for use in infants and children. Overuse can cause gastric upset and abdominal discomfort.
Licorice Root Glycyrrhiza glabra and G. uralensis A legume native to southern Europe,India and parts of Asia. Traditionally usedin Ayurveda as a medicine for rejuvenation. Increases the activity of other herbs. Boosts inactive resistant bacteria mechanisms, increases the presence of antibacterial agents in the body and enhances immune function Many licorice products in the US do not actually contain any licorice. The actual root interacts with many prescription medication. Not safe when consumed in high doses for more than 4 weeks. Not for use for those with high blood pressure. Interacts with estrogen in the body and may cause absence of menstruation.
Ginger Root Zingiber officinale The root of a flowering plant native to China and India. Increases the activity of other herbs. Boosts inactive resistant bacteria mechanisms, increases the presence of antibacterial agents in the body and enhances immune function May cause irritation when applied to the skin. Not for regular use by diabetics because it may lower blood sugar.
Black Pepper Piper nigrum and P. longum Made from the fruit of the piper nigrum plant which is dried and ground up. Increases the activity of other herbs. Boosts inactive resistant bacteria mechanisms, increases the presence of antibacterial agents in the body and enhances immune function May decrease how quickly the liver breaks down some medications.
Oregon Grape Berberis aquifolium The root of a plant native to western North America. Contains a substance known as berberine, which can stop bacteria from adhering to the walls of the intestine and urinary tract. Berberine can stop bacteria dead in it's tracts. Not proven safe for children or pregnant mothers. Berberine in the root can cause brain damage in newborns.
King of Bitters Andographis paniculata Leaves and root of a plant widely cultivated in Southern and Southeastern Asia. Used in traditional Siddha and Ayurvedic medicine. Disrupts the quorum-sensing system of bacteria. This system helps bacteria to attach to eachother and thrive as a community. Andographis basically helps break up the bacterial 'party'. Beneficial to treat symptoms of upper respiratory tract infections and sinus problems. Numerous studies report its ability to reduce upper respiratory symptoms infection such as fatigue, sore throat, cough and headache. It's potent antibacterial properties provide protectiona gainst most pathogens. Is widely known as an abortifacient, not for use by pregnant women.
Manuka Honey   Specifically produced in New Zealand by bees that pollinate the manuka bush. Used in hospital protocols for wound care. Most honey has antibacterial activity but manuka honey has a compound called methylglyoxal which is especially potent. Studies have confirmed it's activity against a wide range of medically important bacteria including MRSA Best if medical-grade or has a high AMF/UMF rating.
Garlic Allium Sativum A bulbous plant native to central Asia. Used as both food and medicine in many cultures for thousands of years. Effective against antibiotic resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Studies have also showed garlic extract reduced the viability of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in mice and lowered inflammation associated with the infection. Russian soldiers used it as an antibiotic in WWII after running out of penicillin. Contains Allicin, a powerful compoung which can fight superbugs such as VRE and MRSA that have shown resistance to traditional anitbiotics. Garlic’s broad antimicrobial spectrum incorporates antifungal, antiparasitic, antiprotozoan, and antiviral attributes in one food source Known for causing bad breath and pungent sweat. Care must be taken when applying topically, as garlic has been known to cause burns.
Weeping Forsythia Forsythia Suspensia The fruit of a flowering plant native to Asia. One of the 50 fundamental herbs used in TCM. Oral extracts from dried forsythia fruit have proven effective in killing antibiotic-resistant Streptococcus suis, both alone and when combined with amoxicillin. Quite often referred to as a broad specturm antibiotic compound, could possibly have systemic affects. May cause extra bleeding during and after surgery. Not known if safe for pregnant and breast-feeding women.
Coconut Oil   The oil of the fruit from the coconut palm tree. Coconut fat contains high amounts of lauric acid, a medium-chain triglyceride. In the body, lauric acid turns into monolaurin, a monoglyceride with antibacterial properties also found in human breast milk. Nature's antibiotics. Has the ability to kill harmful bacteria such as H.pylori. Research shows it's also effective at fighting C.difficile, a strain of antibiotic-resistant bacteria and one of the leading causes of diarrhea in hospitals worldwide. Considered safe for children and pregnant/breastfeeding mothers. None known.
Oregano Oil Origanum Vulgare Oil made from the leaf of the plant. HIgh in antioxidant activity, contains antimicrobial properties that support your immune and respiratory systems. When used aromatically, can decrease airborne pathogensand boost immunity. Studies have shown that a combination of monolaurin and oil of oregano is effective against staph infections in mice, even more so than vancomycin, a type of antibiotic. An in vitro study showed that oregano oil makes conventional antibiotics more effective against E.coli, lowering the the effective dose and and subsequent side effects. Even some poultry farms have found success in using oregano to reduce the use of antibiotics in animals. May cause mild stomach upset. May lower blood sugar levels, people with diabetes should use with caution. Not for use with anyone taking lithium-based medications.
Vitamin D   Can be found in small amounts in some foods but the highest concentration is obtained through exposure to sunlight. Often made in the laboratory as medicine. Short term, megadoses of Vitamin D has antibiotic potential due to it's expression of the gene involved in producing endogenous antimicrobial peptides, our body's own antibiotic. Extremely high doses can cause excessively high calcium levels in the blood. Can also increase the amount of aluminium the body absorbs.
Olive Leaf Extract Olea Europaea Extracts from the leaf of the olive tree. Helps defend against a wide variety of viruses and bacteria. Has the ability to cut off the amino acid supply to viruses, which helps keep them from spreading. ONe study has found that exposing E.Coli to a 6% olive leaf extract completely destroyed it. May cause temporary worsening of symptoms before it becomes effective. May cause dizziness in people who have low blood pressure. Must start with low doses to gauge effect.
Pau D'Arco Tabebuia impetiginosa The bark of a tree that grows primarily in the rainforests of Central and South America. Rich in lapachol and beta-lapachone, two compounds with anti-viral and antibacterial properties. Shown to have effect where drug-resistant infections reside. Possibly unsafe at high doses. Commercial teas containing Pau D'arco may not have effective dosages to treat symptoms. Not for use by people with bleeding disorders or pre/post-surgery.
Colloidal Silver   Mineral-based colloid consisting of silver particles suspended in liquid. One of the most effective agents in the battle against antibiotic-resistant super pathogens. Low doses of silver can make antiobiotics up to 1000 times more effective and may even allow an antibiotic to combat an otherwise antibiotic-resistant bacteria. If solution is not optimized for small particle size or unpure silver salts are used in the process of making colloidal silver, a rare condition called Arghyria may cause blue coloring of the skin.
Chelated Silver Oxide   The silver is chelated with amino acids – the building blocks of proteins – making it more bioactive and bioavailable unlike any other silver compound. Chelated Silver oxide ointment has successfully treated jellyfish and scorpio stings, sore throats, urinary tract infections, cold sores, even a food poisoning, aside from common topical infections. Compared to colloidal silver, chelated silver oxide binds up to 2.5 hours on the skin – in comparison with 10 minutes for normal silver compounds. This is all time spent on reducing and eliminating bacteria, which makes it a much more powerful bug killer - without causing resistance or issues with immune system. Scarce availability.
Echinacea Echinacea Angustifollia A perennial herb often used in conjunction with goldenseal to bolster the immune system. A great general remedy for helping the body rid itself of microbial infections. May be used for infection and inflammation anywhere in the body. Is often effective against both bacterial and viral attacks. When taken by mouth it can cause nausea, sore throat, and numbness and tingling in the mouth. Not effective alongside immunosuppressive medication.
Myrrh Commiphora myrrha An aromatic natural gum (resin) harvested from a number of small, thorny tree species native to Yemen, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia. Touted for it's antiseptic, antibiotic and antiviral properties.Most commonly reccommended for bacterial oral infections,bronchitis and sore throats May cause skin rash if applied directly to the skin. Large doses are considered unsafe. Can also increase a fever.
Thyme Thymus Vulgaris The flowers, leaves and oil of a popular herb,sometimes used in combination with other herbs. Expectorant and antibacterial properties. Fequently used in preparations to support and protect the respiratory system. Considered safe for children and pregnant/breastfeeding mothers. Can upset the digestive system. Can act like estrogen in the body and should be used cautiously by those who may be sensitive to this.
Bovine Colostrum   Milky fluid that comes from the breasts of cows the first few days after giving birth,before true milk appears. Rich in immunoglobulins which strengthen your immune system and help fight off harmful bacteria and viruses such as E.Coli, Cryptosporidium parvum, Shigella flexneri, Salmonella Staphylococcus and rotavirus. Was the main source of immunoglobulins used to fight off disease before the development of antibiotics. Also proven helpful against herpes viruses and HIV and difficult to treat bacterial and fungal infections like Mycobacterium fortuitum and Mycobacterium tuberculosis , cryptosporidosis in AIDS patients and candida. Rare reports of problems with HIV positive people. Not to be taken by anyone who is allergic to cow's milk or milk products.

 

Jan Wellmann was born in Helsinki, Finland, in a very cold atmosphere. Later he rebelled, believing that he belonged to an extinct Gecko species that could only thrive in tropical climate, and escaped to California. He now lives in Los Angeles, where he projects multiple fractured images of himself, some of them reminiscent of human behavior. Submit your story or essay to Buzzworthy Blogs.

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