But don’t underestimate the ingenuity of pharmaceutical development wizards. There are indeed capsules that can survive stomach acid and release in the small intestine. There are several different strategies they use, from capsules which don’t dissolve quickly at a low pH but do at a neutral pH to sticking the medicine in beads inside the capsule - the capsule dissolves in the stomach, but the beads of medicine don’t break open until the small intestine - to a capsule within the capsule.
Everybody who’s healthy has E. Coli in their gut. And when you’ve got C. Diff, you don’t have enough E. Coli.
And the only hepatitis you’re likely to get from the colon is Hep A, which is relatively benign in 99.99% of the cases (in that it rarely kills or permanently harms you.) Besides, donors can be screened for Hep A.
C’mon, be in favor of fecal transplant. Give a, oh never mind.
Thank you WhyNot. I’ve only ever seen one company make such a claim and it was pooh-poohed (;)) by others as having no proof. The gel capsules of the brand pushed by my co-op left me feeling like I was throwing my money away.