From some perspectives, we humans aren’t really so much individuals as we are walking ecosystems—our bodies carry more bacterial cells—with their own genomes and agendas—than the total count of human cells we’re composed of. Bacteria cover our skin, get to our food before we have the chance to absorb it, and in many cases stay helpfully out of the way of the immune system.
Given all that, it shouldn’t be a surprise that we’re finding that bacteria can have significant effects on the human body in ways that go well beyond causing an infection. Two articles that appeared this week drive that home. In one, doctors cured a recurring, diarrhea-causing infection simply by transplanting gut bacteria from a healthy individual. And in the second, the bacterial transplants altered the progression of type 1 (autoimmune) diabetes in mice—by altering the animal’s testosterone levels.
Fighting bacteria with bacteria
Clostridium difficile, or C. diff, is a bacteria that tends to cause extended bouts of diarrhea. In about 20 percent of the cases that end up under a doctor’s care, it will get into the digestive system and refuse to come back out, creating recurring bouts of illness that don’t respond to most antibiotics. At that point, the standard of care is an intensive course of vancomycin, which only works in about 60 percent of patients. With each further recurrence, the rate of success goes down even further.
Anecdotal evidence and case reports had suggested that the problem wasn’t so much the presence of C. diff as the fact that it had grown out of balance with the rest of the gut’s bacterial ecosystem. To get the gut back into balance, fecal transplants had been tried and, anecdotally at least, they worked. So some doctors in the Netherlands decided to do a clinical trial, comparing a fecal transplant to standard care with vancomycin. The trial was what the researchers called “open label,” meaning that people were aware they were having a feeding tube stuffed down their nose to deliver someone else’s poop into their body. (A Twitter pundit suggested a Nutella infusion might make for a good placebo control.)

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