Thanks! This was a very helpful and well thought out reply! I appreciate it!It's because they are FROM a human gut, so they are already selected for being able to survive there! SOME of the probiotic species (such as Lactobacillus acidophilus) were originally isolated from stool, but none of them have been cultivated in the gut for many, many generations.
In addition, FMT contains MANY more species than probiotics. The most diverse of regular probiotics have 20-30 species (most contain <10, and some really rare probiotics, particularly Equilibrium, have >100, albeit none of them isolated from the gut), whereas FMT contains hundreds or even thousands. The majority of species even from a FMT don't colonize long-term, but when you have hundreds of them in total, the chance that at least a few species DO colonize is very high.
My own experience and the experience of people I have read about (patient testimonials as well as comparing across clinical studies), this is NOT true. In fact if anything the opposite is true, where patients had good experiences with stool banks/providers who process more extensively and struggle to reproduce that with providers who don't, or studies that used more processed stool reporting a higher percentage of successful FMTs than studies that used less processed stool.The more the stool sample is processed, the less effective it is likely to be.
My own experience and the experience of people I have read about (patient testimonials as well as comparing across clinical studies), this is NOT true. In fact if anything the opposite is true, where patients had good experiences with stool banks/providers who process more extensively and struggle to reproduce that with providers who don't, or studies that used more processed stool reporting a higher percentage of successful FMTs than studies that used less processed stool.
Of the people I have encountered who advocate using minimally processed stool, I don't recall seeing ONE who has actually had the chance to try both highly processed and minimally processed FMTs and who reported a significant difference in response in favor of the minimally processed FMT (if you know of one, please do share it here). The only people I see arguing in favor of minimally processed stool are either those who have never actually done a FMT at all, or else have ONLY ever used minimally processed stool, and who are therefore speaking from assumption and/or educated guessing, not from actually having ever experienced firsthand a worse result from highly processed FMTs (or from knowing a friend or acquaintance who did).
Don't you have a science degree? You constantly say the most unscientific things, demonstrating a fundamental lack of understanding of how basic evidence works.My own experience and the experience of people I have read about (patient testimonials as well as comparing across clinical studies), this is NOT true. In fact if anything the opposite is true
I think you just completely fabricated this claim to support what you want to be true. Go ahead and look through the studies I referenced above, and make a thread here listing their processing: https://forum.humanmicrobiome.info/forums/fecal-microbiota-transplant-fmt/?prefix_id=63studies that used more processed stool reporting a higher percentage of successful FMTs than studies that used less processed stool
This is not how scientific evidence works. Anecdotes are ranked very low on the Hierarchy of evidence.Of the people I have encountered who advocate using minimally processed stool, I don't recall seeing ONE who has actually had the chance to try both highly processed and minimally processed FMTs and who reported a significant difference in response in favor of the minimally processed FMT
Citations needed.There are several studies out there that show reduced diversity and viability the more the stool is processed, especially how it is processed.
What about the studies with good results? It seems you don't even have a tag for that. It's pointless to just look at the failures and not the successes--the point is to find the things that are more common in the successful trials than the unsuccessful ones. Of course it wont be the case that ALL trials that are successful will use one kind of processing and ALL the ones that are UNsuccessful will use a different kind of processing. The James Adams successful autism results used processed stool (and also vancomycin pretreatment, which you claim is unimportant).One can also browse through the studies that got poor results and see that they processed the stool:
You'd have to use the prefix filter: https://forum.humanmicrobiome.info/forums/microbiome-studies-articles/?prefix_id=6, and look through the wiki.What about the studies with good results? It seems you don't even have a tag for that.