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The Normal Flora of the Human Body
What are the normal flora?It may or may not surprise you to find out that your body is host to billions of bacteria of many different kinds. These bacteria exist in many different parts of the body, and usually do not cause any problems for the host body. The following is a list of the main sites for bacteria that consitute the normal flora.
The normal flora of the digestive tractThe stomach contains few bacteria because of its high acidity. Still there are some bacteria that survive there. Perhaps the most important of these is a recently discovered bacterium, Helicobacter Pylori, now known to be the cause of most (greater than 95%) cases of gastritis and peptic ulcers. The small intestine usually contains small numbers of Streptococci, Lactobacilli, and yeasts, particularly Candida Albicans. Larger numbers of these bacteria are found in the terminal ileum, the section of the small intestine just before the colon. The large intestine, or colon, is the main site for bacteria in the body. Roughly twenty percent of the faeces of a normal person consists of bacteria, most of which have come from the colon. The main bacteria in the colon are Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Eubacterium, Coliforms, Streptococcus, Lactobacillus and Clostridium. There are many different types of relationship that the body can have with the normal flora. These are
Are the normal flora always beneficial?The answer to this question is: definitely not! If they remain in the site with which they are usually associated, the normal flora are usually beneficial. However, some members of the normal flora are also opportunistic pathogens, or are pathogenic if they turn up at a site with which they are not normally associated. Bacteroides bacteria, which normally reside in the intestines, may produce abscesses if they penetrate into deeper tissues via traumatic or surgical wounds. E.coli, a normal inhabitant of the gastrointestinal tract, is the most common cause of urinary tract infections.
Why do the normal flora not induce an immune response from the host?The short answer to this question is that they do. Antibodies to the normal flora exist in our bodies, but at lower concentrations than would exist for pathogenic bacteria. They provide a "sparring partner" for our bodies that keeps our immune systems in tune. The precise role that our immune systems take in regulating the populations of the normal flora is not known.
Source: http://crohn.ie/archive/PRIMER/normflor.htm
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