When healthy volunteers were given a daily dose of 3 x 108 life-dehydrated Saccharomyces cerevisiae cells for 5 days, the volunteers excreted 105 living yeast cells per g of feces at first, but the yeast cells disappeared within 5 days of the end of treatment. In gnotobiotic mice, S. cerevisiae administered alone colonized the intestinal tract but did not interfere with previous or subsequent colonization by a variety of potentially enteropathogenic microorganisms. When these microorganisms were present, the intestinal counts of S. cerevisiae were greatly reduced.
CITATION STYLE
Pecquet, S., Guillaumin, D., Tancrede, C., & Andremont, A. (1991). Kinetics of Saccharomyces cerevisiae elimination from the intestines of human volunteers and effect of this yeast on resistance to microbial colonization in gnotobiotic mice. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 57(10), 3049–3051. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.57.10.3049-3051.1991
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