Bacteria!
It’s something that I think of quite frequently these days. I’m mean, doctors have seen some horrific things due to bacteria, so a bunch of it is very justified. But I feel bacteria is not fully understood, and medicine just takes the approach that they normally do, and nuke the heck out of it.
I’ve thought vaguely about bacteria for a while, but I really started contemplating about it at the beginning of the year. My dog Yukon had a medical procedure, and they put him on antibiotics afterward. As I mentioned in a few other posts, I had been working with the garden soil, which involved a lot of manure.
Yukon does not eat manure, as some dogs do. I was spreading it around on the ornamental plants in the front yard, where he spends a lot of his time. He had been taking antibiotics for about 7 days. All of a sudden, he started chowing down on the manure.
“That’s weird” I said to my wife.
I started thinking about, when he was a puppy, he had an infection and the vet put him on antibiotics. He snacked on some manure while we would go hiking, that time as well. Those are the only times he has eaten manure. He ignores it the rest of the time. And believe me, I still spread it around a lot.
What are his animal instincts telling him?
I have a few cancer theories, and gut bacteria being one of them. Cancer develops from a dysfunctional immune system. Everyone has cancer cells, but most people’s immune systems wipe it out. Your immune system comes from your gut. Wouldn’t it be logical that people who have cancer (or other health problems) have a significant problem with their gut?
Our gut should be like healthy garden soil. Full of life and diversity. I do believe that most intestinal troubles, weird unexplained rashes, chronic inflammation and maybe autoimmune diseases are all from your gut being out of wack.
I know I personally was exposed to way too many antibiotics, as well as a lot of other environmental toxins. I felt like any time I went to the doctor with any sickness, I was prescribed antibiotics. “It’s most likely a virus, but take these antibiotics just in case.” It took me too long to stop and think about the side consequences of taking so many.
I also find it curious, that veterinarians seem to be very pro probiotics, especially after a course of antibiotics, and will even prescribe probiotics for an animal.
Try to ask a human doctor, especially an oncologist about probiotics, and in my experience, they put on their politician face and dodge the question or try and pass the buck. It’s very frustrating.

To be fair, there are some doctors who are currently studying gut bacteria and the system on a whole. It also seems like the studies are picking up steam. There are even some studies from hundreds of years old. Ever hear of yellow soup from ancient Chinese medicine? It’s worth a google search and read, if you aren’t squeamish (dogs are definitely not squeamish about it).
I came across a study earlier in the year, unfortunately I can’t find it anymore. It was talking about the relationship of a healthier gut micro biome and people achieving MRD negative status from a stem cell transplant. People who had a better gut were more likely to be MRD negative. After reading that, I started eating probiotics foods prior to my transplant and started eating them again as soon as it was safe for me to do so afterwards.
While trying to find the previously mentioned study, I came across this one. Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center wrote this piece, “Fecal Transplants Boost Helpful Microbiota for Stem Cell Transplant Patients”. Basically, if you don’t want to read it, people who had a more diverse micro biome recovered better. It also said people who had an allogeneic bone marrow transplant (donor stem cells), and had a fecal transplant, didn’t suffer as much of graft vs host disease.
That’s huge!
I actually had a chair next to a guy one day at Stanford, who had graft vs host disease from an allogeneic transplant. As I mentioned, they only have “privacy curtains” between the chairs, that don’t really provide much privacy. I saw the guy’s pictures of his rash. I went back to the apartment that day and read up on graft vs host. I could tell he had it severe, and his odds of being alive in the next six months we’re not very high.
Would a fecal transplant from himself, collected prior, saved his life? Possibly. If it was an option for myself, although I did well, and I had an autologous transplant, I would have given it a shot just to increase my odds.
Health tree for Myeloma, a really great resource if you are affected by myeloma, wrote a few posts on gut bacteria and better myeloma outcomes. I think they are worth a read. Your gut bacteria and responses to multiple myeloma treatment and Myeloma and the microbiome the proven connection.

Sometimes, I wonder whether a drug works for you or not, or how well it works for you depends on your bacteria in your gut? Chemotherapy eventually is no longer effective for you and they have to switch to another kind. Is that because your body/cancer just got used to the chemo? Or is it because the bacteria in your gut that helps process it is no longer viable or around? It would be a fascinating study.
But I don’t believe it’s as simple as popping in a bunch of probiotics.
“Take this pill, with 6 ka-gillion beneficial bacteria per pill, and all your woes will be cured!”
I believe you can have too much of certain types of good bacteria in you as well. I also feel, a hunch, there are things like micro bacteria, like micro nutrients, that are supposed to exist in your gut. Too much of any bacteria including good ones, don’t leave room for the lesser bacteria.
I don’t know about you, but my neutrophils are high enough, so I’m going to keep imputing good bacteria from probiotic sources such as yogurt, sauerkraut, beet kvass and whatever else I come across (diversity!) and pop an occasional probiotic pill. Couple that with continuing to eat lots of vegetables for the bacteria to thrive, let’s see what can happen. The bacteria battle is constantly happening within me, between the killing (chemo) and the replenishing.
Wouldn’t that be something. The cure for so many diseases, including cancer, would be a bacteria transfer from someone with a healthy intact gut (maybe from someone from 200 years ago or an Amish person). Something that is free and flushed away every day. (I’m not advising you to DIY).
Now that’s something that would keep up pharmaceutical companies at night!