People who have suffered severe burns are known to be at risk for a host of complications, but there may be other consequences lurking deeper within the body: A new study finds that a burn may change the community of bacteria within a person’s gut, and possibly lead to an increased risk of infection.
In the study, researchers analyzed fecal bacteria from four patients with severe burns over at least 30 percent of their body, and compared these bacteria with of people with minor burns. They found that the severely burned patients had higher levels of a potentially dangerous group of bacteria called Enterobacteriaceae, which includes and .
In fact, Enterobacteriaceae made up 31.9 percent of the in the people with severe burns, compared with just 0.5 percent in those with minor burns, according to the study, published today (July 8) in the journal PLOS ONE.
The results are preliminary, but they indicate that the bacteria in the gastrointestinal system, called the microbiome, may offer a path for doctors to help severely burned patients, said Mashkoor Choudhry, senior author of the study and a professor of microbiology at Loyola University in Chicago. []
Choudhry and his colleagues speculated that probiotics—“good” bacteria aimed at —may help treat people who have higher levels of harmful bacteria and decrease their risk of sepsis or bacterial infections. However, they did not test whether probiotics were beneficial for patients during this study.
Dr. Nikolaos Pyrsopoulos, director of gastroenterology and hepatology at New Jersey Medical School and an associate professor at Rutgers University, said the findings are preliminary but are part of a larger effort in the medical community to understand how the human .
For example, Enterobacteriaceae may get into a person’s , and spread from there, potentially causing sepsis or a dangerous infection, he said.
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