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USE OF PROBIOTICS IN PREVENTING ANTIBIOTIC ASSOCIATED DIARRHOEA AND CLOSTRIDIUM DIFFICILE ASSOCIATED DIARRHOEA IN SPINAL INJURY CENTRES: AN INTERNATIONAL MULTICENTRE SURVEY.

Authors :
Samford Wong
Saif, Mofid
O'Driscoll, Jean
Kumar, Naveen
Smith, Éimear
Roels, Ellen
van Nes, Ilse
Faber, Willemijn
McKeown, Eamonn
Hirani, Shashi P.
Jamous, Ali
Source :
International Journal of Probiotics & Prebiotics. May-Aug2015, Vol. 10 Issue 2/3, p85-90. 6p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Probiotics may prevent antibiotic-associatedand Clostridium difficile-associated-diarrhoea (AAD/CDAD). Many spinal cord injury centres (SCICs) practitioners consider probiotics generically and may not realise that efficacy can be strain-, dose-, and disease-specific. One to four SCICs per country (depending on population size) were contacted (UK:4; the Netherlands:3; Belgium: I; Republic of Ireland: 1) to (a) determine if they stocked probiotics; (b) determine whether the use of those probiotics was evidence-based; and (c) document their C. difficile infection (CDI) practices. All nine SCICs responded to the survey (7 physicians, 3 microbiologists, 1 nurse and 2 dietitians). Five (55.5%) stocked probiotics; five different probiotics were identified. Four probiotics were preferred choice prevention of AAD/CDAD were Lactobacillus casei Shirota (44.4%), L. casei DN-114001 (22.2%), L. acidophilus (22.2%) and a mixed-strains probiotic (Ecologic Pro-AD) (11.1%). Only one evidence base study was identified supporting the use of probiotic fo r prevention ofAAD in SCI patients. Mean CDI cases per 10,000 patient-days were 0.307 (s.d: 0.486, range 0.00 to 1.08). Definitions of diarrhoea and CDI varied among SCICs. Stocking probiotics fo r the prevention of AAD/ CDAD is not common. There is only one single study showing efficiency of a particular strain in SCI populations. The study highlighted the importance of using a standardised definition of diarrhoea when conducting AAD/ CDAD research. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15551431
Volume :
10
Issue :
2/3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Probiotics & Prebiotics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
110875353