
Bacterial Count Discussion Endorsing A Five-Year, Natural Temperature
Fermentation Japanese Probiotic Product
Some people in the United States continue to believe the myth that a probiotic product is inferior if the bacterial
count does not equal several tens of billions. This belief is wrong and its proponents most likely are not familiar
with state-of-the-art probiotic products developed in Japan using a five-year, natural temperature fermentation
process!
The Japanese, recognized as leaders in the development and use of probiotics, discontinued their efforts to further
increase the bacterial count in their probiotic products more than a decade ago. That decision was based on scientific
research that ultimately, late in the 20
th. Century, led to the development of new, high technology
probiotic products. Today, the best of the Japanese probiotic products appears to be several technological generations
ahead of all freeze dried and most other probiotic products now being manufactured in the United States.
Usually, a product that contains tens of billions of live lactic acid bacteria is endorsed because of the mistaken
belief (and hope) that substantial numbers of the bacteria might survive the challenging journey that begins with the
manufacturing process and concludes with the implantation of bacteria in the colon. It has now been established that
the majority of the lactic acid bactena contained in high bacterial count products die before they are consumed. Also,
many of the remaining bactena are often killed after consumption and before they are able to implant themselves in the
upper colon.
By the time freeze-dried and certain other probiotic products are eaten, they do not contain the high numbers of live
lactic acid bacteria guaranteed by the manufacturer to be present at the time of packaging. Eighty percent of the
bacteria die before consumption! Tne remaining live bacteria often do not survive the trip from the mouth to the colon
because of their inability to endure exposure to harsh stomach acids. Live bacteria also die after reaching the colon
if sufficient levels of naturally developed fructooligosaccharides (FOS) are not present when they arrive. The natural
FOS are required to nourish the bacteria and permit their survival while battling the well-established colonies of bad
microflora already in the colon.
Japanese research scientists, including the award-winning microbiologist, Iichiroh Ohhira, Ph.D., and his team of
research scientists from Okayama University, do not recommend using probiotic products that allegedly contain tens of
billions of live lactic acid bacteria. They recommend products that contain several strains of naturally developed
organic acids that are encapsulated along with important strains of live lactic acid bacteria, vitamins, minerals and
ammino acids. Dr. Ohhira's probiotic product, which was developed in the 1980s, selected as Japan's "Best New Product"
in 1991, and improved over time, contains four types of naturally-fermented organic acids that enhance the body's
ability to generate lactic acid bacteria and support the body's efforts to utilize the 12 strains of friendly lactic
acid bactena contained in the product. Since 100 percent of the bacteria in the product are alive when eaten and
because of the specially formulated enteric-coating, the entire contents of the capsule survive the trip to the colon.
The existence of naturally developed fructooligosacchandes (FOS), developed during the five-year natural fermentation
process, provides the nourishment required by the 12 strains of friendly live lactic acid bacteria upon their arrival
in the colon. This permits the live lactic acid bactena to thrive while they fight and destroy the bad bacteria
residing in the colon. The bacteria also consume these same naturally developed fructooligosacchandes (FOS) while
existing in the enteric-coated capsule, thus leading to a five-year shelf life.
The proprietary
E. Faecalis TH 10 strain of live lactic acid bacteria present in the product may be the most
important component of Dr. Ohhira's probiotic product. This strain was developed from the Malaysian food
delicacy—tempeh. It is 6.25 times stronger than any other known lactic acid bacteria. This strain is guaranteed to
kill and remove the bad bacteria living in the colon, as well as eliminate the toxins produced by those bacteria. The
TH 10 remains in the colon and if a pathogenic invader arrives, it along with the T cells and B cells attack and
destroy the invader. As university-based, in vitro studies indicate, the TH 10 strain is effective against E. coli
0-157, H. Pylori, the Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus "superbug," etc. Clearly, the TH 10 strain of
bacteria is the foremost ingredient of a 21
st. Century approach to good health.
The Japanese are not the only scientists who caution against using high bacterial count probiotics. In Probiotics: A
Critical Review, the author examines the body's autoimmune response to the entry of tens of billions of lactic acid
bacteria — whether they are alive or dead, friendly or unfriendly.
1 The author notes that when bacteria
enter the body, it immediately determines whether the invading bacteria are of "self" or "non-self". When the body
determines that the invading bactena are of "non-self," as usually occurs when large numbers of bacteria enter the
body, it elicits an autoimmune response against the bacteria and directs the body to fight the invaders. When this
occurs, a substantial number of bacteria are destroyed because of the immune system's normal response to "non-self"
invaders. The Japanese scientists, being aware of how the immune system responds to the invasion of tens of billions
of bacteria, reduced the number of bactena in their product to assure a favorable immune system response, which
enhances the ability of the friendly bacteria to implant themselves in the colon.
1Tannock, Gerald W., Probiotics: A Critical Review, Horizon Scientific Press. January 1999.
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