Would you drink a broth of bacteria to prove the real case of an illness?
(discussed Oct 12)

By the 1970s, cases of people with gastric ulcers were recurrent. Stress, spicy food, and lifestyle were thought to provoke peptic ulcers because no one believed in the presence of bacteria in the stomach. In 1981, Barry Marshall and Warren performed biopsies on patients and were able to isolate an unknown bacterial species present in almost all patients with gastric infarction, duodenal ulcers or gastric ulcers. For this reason, they proposed that this unknown bacterium was the cause of the disease. Their experiments and discoveries were not immediately accepted. Due to prohibitions on human subjects and after trying different animal models with no success, Marshall underwent a gastric biopsy to demonstrate absence of that bacterium and then swallowed bacterial broth that possessed the bacteria of an infected patient. After several days, the disease developed and the second biopsy of his own intestine proved that in effect, the bacteria was the cause of the ulcer.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.