Skip to main content
Supplement Research and Comparison WebsiteBest Price Guarantee
Supplement Research and Comparison Website

Lactobacillus acidophilus LB: a useful pharmabiotic for the treatment of digestive disorders

  • 2020-01
  • Therapeutic Advances in Gastroenterology 13
    • José María Remes Troche
    • E. Coss Adame
    • Miguel Ángel Valdovinos Díaz
    • O. Gómez Escudero
    • María Eugenia Icaza Chávez
    • José Antonio Chávez-Barrera
    • F. Zárate Mondragón
    • José Antonio Ruíz Velarde Velasco
    • Guillermo Rafael Aceves Tavares
    • Marco Antonio Lira Pedrín
    • Eduardo Cerda Contreras
    • R. Carmona Sánchez
    • Héctor Guerra López
    • Rodolfo Solana Ortiz

Abstract

Dysbiosis, a loss of balance between resident bacterial communities and their host, is associated with multiple diseases, including inflammatory bowel diseases (nonspecific chronic ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease), and digestive functional disorders. Probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotic organisms and, more recently, pharmabiotics, have been shown to modulate the human microbiota. In this review, we provide an overview of the key concepts relating to probiotics, prebiotics, synbiotic organisms, and pharmabiotics, with a focus on available clinical evidence regarding the specific use of a unique pharmabiotic, the strain Lactobacillus acidophilus LB (Lactobacillus boucardii), for the management of gastrointestinal disorders. Since it does not contain living organisms, the administration of L. acidophilus LB is effective and safe as an adjuvant in the treatment of acute diarrhea, chronic diarrhea, and antibiotic-associated diarrhea, even in the presence of immunosuppression.

Keywords: L. acidophilus LB; acute diarrhea; antibiotic-associated diarrhea; pharmabiotics; probiotics.

Research Insights

SupplementHealth OutcomeEffect TypeEffect Size
Lactobacillus LBReduced Antibiotic-Associated DiarrheaBeneficial
Moderate
Lactobacillus LBReduced Incidence of Acute DiarrhoeaBeneficial
Moderate
Lactobacillus LBReduced Incidence of Chronic DiarrheaBeneficial
Moderate
Back to top