17th March 2004
Microbes researchers highlight drawbacks of antibiotics:
Antibiotics alter the normal bacterial flora in humans

Bacteria that are resistant to antibiotics can live in the human intestines for at least one year.
Professor Charlotta Edlund from the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, and
Research Professor Pentti Huovinen from the National Public Health Institute are keen to
highlight the risks involved in the excessive use of antibiotics.

In their research funded  by the Academy of Finland, the two professors are exploring the
long-term impacts of antibiotic treatment on the bacterial flora in human intestines. At the
same time, they are looking to develop new research methods for studying intestinal bacterial
flora. The project is part of the Academy's Microbes and Man research programme, a joint
effort among researchers from Finland and Sweden.

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria are one of the most serious threats to health care. Earlier it has
been assumed that the effects of antibiotics disappear within a couple of months and that the
intestinal bacterial flora is then restored to normal. Researchers believe that antibiotics also
have characteristics which maintain and promote the health of the bacterial flora.

It has now been shown that the antibiotic studied, i.e. clindamycine, continues to have a
clearly visible impact up to one year after treatment is discontinued. Even more surprisingly, it
has been found that resistance also increases to other antibiotics, such as penicillins,
tetracyclines, and macrolides. In other words, the use of one type of antibiotic simultaneously
increases resistance to several other antibiotics.

The focus of research at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm is upon intestinal anaerobic
bacteria that have poor tolerance of oxygen, while researchers at the National Public Health
Institute in Turku are studying aerobic bacteria, which also grow in the presence of oxygen.

For further information  please contact
     Professor Charlotta Edlund, Södertörns högskola or Karolinska Institutet, tel. +46 8 585
     811 39, Charlotta.Edlund@labmed.ki.se
     Pentti Huovinen, Research Professor, National Public Health Institute, tel. +358 2 331
     6601 or +358 400 442 637, pentti.huovinen@ktl.fi.

Academy of Finland Communications Unit
Information Officer Leena Vähäkylä
tel. +358 9 7748 8327
leena.vahakyla@aka.fi


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