AHI EVRAN III INTERNATIONAL CONGRES ON SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH May 3-4, 2023 Odlar Yurdu University Baku, Azerbaijan
Lucrarea” MANAGEMENT OF INTESTINAL BACTERIA TRIGGER COMPLICATIONS AFTER SURGERY. THE IMPACT OF DENIPLANT POST OPERATOR TEA
Major Gheorghe GIURGIU1, Prof. dr. Manole COJOCARU2
1Deniplant-Aide Sante Medical Center, Biomedicine, Bucharest, Romania
deniplant@gmail.com; Telephone: +40744 827 881
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5449-2712
2Member of Academy of Romanian Scientists, Scientific Researcher degree I
Titu Maiorescu University, Faculty of Medicine, Bucharest, Romania
Professor of Allergology and Clinical Immunology
European Specialist of Laboratory Medicine
Senior Specialist of Allergology and Clinical Immunology
cojocaru.manole@gmail.com; Telephone: +40723 326 663
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7192-7490
Hospitals have traditionally sought to prevent infections after surgical procedures by maintaining a germ-free environment.
It has long been established that concomitant infections during invasive procedures increase mortality rates.
In nearly all patients, the pathogens were intestinal bacteria such as Enterococcus, Escherichia coli, and Clostridium.
The pathogens seem to breach the intestinal barrier postoperatively and spread throughout the body via the bloodstream.
These infections frequently occur after surgeries on the liver, pancreas, and bile ducts, as well as during operations on the small and large intestine.
A new study shows that, in most cases, the causative agents of these infections are bacteria from the patient’s own intestine.
Even so, these pathogens overcome the intestinal barrier postoperatively and spread throughout the body via the bloodstream and lymphatic vessels. They can be stopped by special immune cells, which patrol all organs, including the liver.
It has long been known that side infections increase mortality during invasive procedures.
As it now turns out, however, the danger comes from a completely different corner: the patient’s intestine.
Several hundred strains of different bacteria with around one hundred trillion microorganisms live in the human intestine.
They form the natural intestinal microbiota, also called the microbiome.
Their existence is beneficial to humans: they help with digestion, eliminate pathogens and train the immune system.
However, this is exactly what can happen after a surgical procedure:
They most frequently caused infections after operations on the liver, pancreas and bile ducts, as well as during operations on the small and large intestine.
In particular, patients who underwent major liver resection–the removal of large parts of the liver–suffered such infections, which significantly delayed the healing process.
Probiotics are the exogenously given, beneficial clusters of live bacteria that, upon digestion, seem to succeed in partially restoring the distorted microbial diversity, thus reducing the infectious complications occurring in surgical and critically ill patients
This review presents the latest data on the interrelationship between the gut microbiome and the occurrence of complications after colon surgery, and the efficacy of probiotics as therapeutic instruments for changing the bacterial imbalance.
In order to restore the homeostasis of the microbiome, several nutritional strategies have been evaluated with the aim to improve the management of critically ill patients.
Importantly, enteral nutrition has proven to be more efficient in promoting the homeostasis of the gut microbiome compared to parenteral nutrition.
Postoperator tea for rapid and infection-free regeneration of tissues damaged by operations or dental interventions.
Postoperator tea is a dietary supplement used for quick recovery after surgical and dental interventions.
This is a combination of plants used in Imuniplant tea and Fructimet tea, to strengthen the immune system and regulate cellular metabolism, to help digestion and more easily transform food into nutrients and trigger the self-healing processes of tissues damaged by surgical or dental interventions
In 2003, when I started a collaboration with a clinic in Germany, I sent them the plants from which I made the Imuniplant tea for analysis.
Following the laboratory tests done there, on blood cells, measuring several times its effects on the redox potential and the production of free radicals, the results were favorable. So plants can act on the immune system
Tea helps complex food substances to be more easily transformed into simple substances that can be absorbed through the walls of the intestine.
Postoperator tea addresses the digestive system, namely the digestive tube and the organs attached to it called accessory glands – the pancreas, the liver. Indications and Properties: Recovery after dental interventions Recovery after surgery
Facilitates rapid healing in the post-operative process and avoids complications of an infectious nature Facilitates rapid scarring of the epithelial tissue
It allows the gradual resumption of normal nutrition without particular problems.
It stimulates the digestive function, helps in the regulation of intestinal transit, in the normal elimination of faecal matter and thus in avoiding constipation that can create complications after any operation.
It helps that complex food substances are more easily transformed into simple substances that can be absorbed through the walls of the intestine.
In this way, proteins, lipids and carbohydrates are more easily subjected to transformations resulting in substances that pass into the blood and reach Remineralizing cells.
Strengthens the immune system, enhancing natural defense reactions.
Administration: For internal use only. 750 ml of tea that is drunk daily. For dental operations, the mouth is rinsed repeatedly Contraindications: There are none. Adverse reactions: They did not appear after long-term use. Duration of treatment: In relation to the evolution of the disease.
Conclusion
Postoperator tea stimulates the digestive function, helps in the regulation of intestinal transit, in the normal elimination of faecal matter and therefore in avoiding constipation that can create complications after any operation.
On the other hand, the tea that has reached the stomach, together with the gastric juice and the pancreatic juice, acts for the digestion of proteins, the digestion of lipids and carbohydrates, and together with the bile for the emulsification of fats.
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