Introductory Disclaimer: I am not a doctor and this is not professional medical advice for treating any medical condition. Improperly using antibiotics – too much or too little – could lead to illness, injury or death. Do the research and draw your own conclusions – the information in this article will help you get started. Don’t resort to using privately purchased antibiotics as long as professional medical care is available.
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WHAT IS SYNERGY?
Synergy is “the interaction or cooperation of two or more …substances… to produce a combined effect greater than the sum of their separate effects.”
Why you might want antibiotic synergism:
- In order to take less antibiotic to minimize effects on intestinal flora (i.e., killing off your beneficial bowel bacteria) and reduce toxicity
- To treat a difficult/advanced infection or resistant bacteria
- To stretch and conserve your antibiotic supply by being able to use less antibiotics for the same effect
- To compensate for the fact that you don’t have a more advanced antibiotic and must make do with available varieties of “fish antibiotics” or other non-traditional sources
- To speed the healing process and return the patient to service sooner
- To wipe out all of the disease-causing bacteria without leaving resistant ones behind to cause a second infection.
AN EXAMPLE
Probably the best-known example of synergism in general is that between grapefruit and statins, but in fact grapefruit can increase or decrease absorption, bioavailability, and duration of availability of 85 drugs. And one glassful of juice can have an effect for up to three days.
Want to know all the fascinating things grapefruit does? Then read this and this.
There was even talk about combining grapefruit with (some) statins in a single pill to allow greater medication effect with a lower drug dose. What scuttled that plan, so far as I can tell, is that variations in individual genetics and personal biochemistry make predicting the degree of synergism impossible, not to mention that grapefruit could synergize other medications that the patient is taking as well!
ANOTHER EXAMPLE
As modern medicine began to treat malaria parasites (“the most deadly disease in the world,” killing nearly 500,000 people annually), the parasites began to develop a resistance to the most commonly used medications (including quinine and doxycycline). Now, a new approach called “Artemisinin Combination Therapy” (ACT) uses an herbal extract of the sweet wormwood plant (which also kills the malaria parasite by itself) at a 50/50 concentration with a known antiparasitic drug, and has been proven superior to using just one medication at a time (monotherapy). Synergism!
Synergism is happening all the time between the foods and supplements we eat and the medications we take. We’re just not used to the idea that it can happen with antibiotics and we’re not used to the idea that we can use this effect to help us under difficult austere medical conditions.Continue reading“Antibiotic Synergism: More Bang for Your Bug, by ShepherdFarmerGeek”
