Thursday, August 23, 2012

Antibiotics fuel obesity by creating microbe upheavals

From Ed Yong: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NotRocketScience/~3/MM0zoI0Zwvw/

 Top of the story:
Antibiotics fuel obesity by creating microbe upheavals
We aren't single individuals, but colonies of trillions. Our bodies, and our guts in particular, are home to vast swarms of bacteria and other microbes. This "microbiota" helps us to harvest energy from our food by breaking down the complex molecules that our own cells cannot cope with. They build vitamins that we cannot manufacture. They 'talk to' our immune system to ensure that it develops correctly, and they prevent invasions from other more harmful microbes. They're our partners in life.
What happens when we kill them?
Farmers have been doing that experiment in animals for more than 50 years. By feeding low doses of antibiotics to healthy farm animals, they've found that they could fatten up their livestock by as much as 15 percent. You can put the antibiotics in their feed or in their water. You can give the drugs to cows, sheep, pigs or chickens. You can try penicillins, or tetracyclines, or many other classes of antibiotics. The effect is the same: more weight.
Consistent though this effect is, no one really understands why it works. The safe bet is that the drugs are exerting their influence by killing off ...


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