Microbial Flora of the Stomach and Gastrointestinal Tract
Microbial flora of the stomach and gastrointestinal tract
The stomach and gastrointestinal tract are not sterile and are colonized by microorganisms that perform functions beneficial to the host, including the manufacture of essential vitamins, and the prevention of colonization by undesirable microbes.
The benefits of the close relationship between the microorganisms and the host also extends to the microbes. Microorganisms are provided with a protected place to live and their environment—rich in nutrients—and is relatively free from predators.
This mutually beneficial association is always present. At human birth, the stomach and gastrointestinal tract are usually sterile. But, with the first intake of food, colonization by bacteria commences. For example, in breast-fed babies, most of the intestinal flora consists of bacteria known as bifidobacteria. As breast milk gives way to bottled milk, the intestinal flora changes to include enteric bacteria, bacteroides, enterococci, lactobacilli, and clostridia.
The flora of the gastrointestinal tract in animals has been studied intensively. These studies have demonstrated that bacteria are the most numerous microbes present in the stomach and gastrointestinal tract. The composition of the bacterial populations varies from animal to animal, even within a species. Sometimes the diet of an animal can select for the dominance of one or a few bacteria over other species. The situation is similar in humans. Other factors that influence the bacterial make up of the human stomach and gastrointestinal tract include age, cultural conditions, and the use of antibiotics . In particular, the use of antibiotics can greatly change the composition of the gastrointestinal flora.
Despite the variation in bacterial flora, the following bacteria tend to be present in the gastrointestinal tract of humans and many animals: Escherichia coli , Clostridium perfringens, Enterococci, Lactobacilli, and Bacteroides.
The esophagus is considered to be part of the gastrointestinal tract. In this region, the bacteria present are usually those that have been swallowed with the food. These bacteria do not normally survive the journey through the highly acidic stomach. Only bacteria that can tolerate strongly acidic environments are able to survive in the stomach. One bacterium that has been shown to be present in the stomach of many people is Helicobacter pylori. This bacterium is now known to be the leading cause of stomach ulcers. In addition, very convincing evidence is mounting that links the bacterium to the development of stomach and intestinal cancers.
In humans, the small intestine contains low numbers of bacteria, some 100,000 to 10 million bacteria per milliliter of fluid. To put these numbers into perspective, a laboratory liquid culture that has attained maximum bacterial numbers will contain 100 million to one billion bacteria per milliliter. The bacterial flora of this region consists mostly of lactobacilli and Enterococcus faecalis. The lower regions of the small intestine contain more bacteria and a wider variety of species, including coliform bacteria such as Escherichia coli.
In the large intestine, the bacterial numbers can reach 100 billion per milliliter of fluid. The predominant species are anaerobic bacteria, which do not grow in the presence of oxygen. These include anaerobic lactic acid bacteria , Bacteroides, and Bifidobacterium bifidum. The bacteria numbers and composition in the large intestine is effectively that of fecal material.
The massive numbers of bacteria in the large intestine creates a great special variation in the flora. Sampling the intestinal wall at different locations will reveal differences in the species of bacteria present. As well, sampling any given point in the intestine will reveal differences in the bacterial population at various depths in the adherent growth on the intestinal wall.
Some bacteria specifically associate with certain cells in the gastrointestinal tract. Gram-positive bacteria such as streptococci and lactobacilli often adhere to cells by means of capsules surrounding the bacteria. Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli can adhere to receptors on the intestinal epithelial cells by means of the bacterial appendage called fimbriae.
The importance of the microbial flora of the stomach and gastrointestinal tract has been demonstrated by comparison of the structure and function of the digestive tracts of normal animals and notobiotic animals. The latter animals lack bacteria. The altered structure of the intestinal tract in the notobiotic animals is less efficient in terms of processing food and absorbing nutrients. Additionally, in animals like cows that consume cellulose, the fermentation activity of intestinal microorganisms is vital to digestion. Thus, the flora of the stomach and intestinal tract is very important to the health of animals including humans.
See also Enterobacteriaceae; Probiotics; Salmonella food poisoning
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Where the winds get lost. (Horse Latitudes)
Magazine article from: Yachting; 4/1/1994; ; 700+ words
; ...Horse Latitudes. The Horse Latitudes are a series of semi-permanent...understand how the Horse Latitudes are formed, picture the...regions. At 30 to 35 degrees latitude, some of this cooling air...the world's oceans, the Horse Latitudes, per se, apply mainly ...
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Horse latitudes.(long term care insurance)(Editorial)
Magazine article from: National Underwriter Life & Health; 1/31/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...been going through the horse latitudes? The horse latitudes, according...vessels transporting horses to the West Indies often...effect, thrown their horses overboard (i.e...exited the business (horse overboard!), another...
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Paul Muldoon. Horse Latitudes.(The End of the Poem: Oxford Lectures)(Book review)
Magazine article from: World Literature Today; 9/1/2007; ; 700+ words
; Paul Muldoon. Horse Latitudes. New York. Farrar, Straus &...His latest volume of poems is called Horse Latitudes. It has nothing to do with...The title of his new book of poems, Horse Latitudes, isn't a place, so it...
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Horse Latitudes: Poems.(Book review)
Magazine article from: The Christian Century; 5/15/2007; ; 700+ words
; Horse Latitudes: Poems. By Paul Muldoon. Farrar, Straus...fathoms, but still remarkable to behold. Horse Latitudes, Muldoon's first book since...understandable but severe. Most readers of Horse Latitudes will find a powerful if troubled...
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The End of the Poem: Oxford Lectures/Horse Latitudes
Magazine article from: Poetry; 12/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...Muldoon. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. $30.00. Horse Latitudes, by Paul Muldoon. Farrar, Straus and Giroux...poems, Muldoon has a new book of those out as well: Horse Latitudes, which is less interesting, because less singular...
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Paul Muldoon's carryings on.(Horse Latitudes, The End of the Poem, General Admission)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Irish Literary Supplement; 9/22/2007; ; 700+ words
; PAUL MULDOON Horse Latitudes. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2007...to call his "corpus," given that in Horse Latitudes the end of art, as of war...by an excrescent "n," manifests in Horse Latitudes a problem with language that...
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In praise of the poetic problem ; The End of the Poem By Paul Muldoon FABER [pound]25 (406pp) ++ Horse Latitudes By Paul Muldoon FABER [pound]14.99 (107pp)
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 12/15/2006; ; 659 words
; ...back to his poems. Horse Latitudes, his 10th collection...ships transporting horses to the West Indies...of water meant the horses had to be thrown overboard. But "Horse Latitudes" is also...Centuries. Thus Horse Latitudes encompasses...
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Horse Latitudes
Magazine article from: The Virginia Quarterly Review; 4/1/2007; ; 397 words
; Horse Latitudes, by Paul Muldoon. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, October 2006. $22 Horse Latitudes, released concurrently with Muldoon...days when Spanish vessels transported horses to the West Indies, would throw their...
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MacNeice knew when to stop ; POETRY ++ Horse Latitudes By Paul Muldoon FABER [pound]14.99
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 11/5/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...a pun as Paul Muldoon goes horse, you can't help wondering...an immediate warning: "The horse latitudes designate [ie are] an area...sailors traditionally threw horses overboard to conserve food...watched an old white horse cross the picket / of himself...
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Books: A swampy tale deep in the heart of Essex James Urquhart can't find the focus of a bold voyage from colonial forests to the ruins of Stansted Airport; Horse Latitudes by Jay Merrick Fourth Estate, pounds 10.99, 276pp
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 2/27/1999; ; 542 words
; ...commission to fetch two horses from the mysterious...easy comparison between Horse Latitudes and Heart of Darkness...ridden return with the horses, and his embarcation...distressing transport of the horses is sharp and exciting, taken as a whole, Horse Latitudes remains just...
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horse latitudes
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...latitudes two belts of latitude where winds are light...migration of the sun. The horse latitudes are associated with...Capricorn." The term horse latitudes supposedly originates...vessels transported horses to the West Indies...mid-ocean in this latitude, thus severely ...
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horse
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
...type of strength. (See also horses .) horse chestnut the fruit of this...remedy for chest diseases in horses, and the name (recorded from...botanical Latin Castanea equina . Horse Guards in the UK, the mounted...for ceremonial duties. horse latitudes a belt of calm air and sea...
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dead horse
Book article from: The Oxford Companion to Ships and the Sea
...adrift, the money being divided among the crew. To flog a dead horse , to expect, vainly, to get extra work out of a ship's crew while they are working off the dead horse. See also horse latitudes .
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wind
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...pressure known as the horse latitudes , regions of descending...of the horse-latitude belts toward the 60° latitude belts of low pressure...the 60° latitude belts of low pressure...of the temperate latitudes), t
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Atmospheric Circulation
Encyclopedia entry from: UXL Encyclopedia of Science
...circulation belts over the middle latitudes between 30 degrees and 60...also occur at 30 degrees latitude where Hadley cells and Ferrell...regions were given the name horse latitudes by sailors bringing horses to the Americas. Stranded...flows back to 60 degrees latitude north and ...
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