Fecal transplants must use human poop—specifically, poop from carefully screened, healthy human donors. Here’s why:

Microbiome compatibility: The human gut microbiome is species-specific. Animal microbiomes are often very different and might not colonize the human gut effectively—or safely.

Pathogen risk: Using non-human feces could introduce dangerous pathogens, parasites, or other harmful organisms that are foreign to the human body.

Regulation and safety: Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is regulated (e.g., by the FDA in the U.S.) and must meet specific safety standards, which only apply to human donor material.

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

Is this a chat gpt answer? 😂

💯 - straight from the AI horse’s mouth.

(I was curious though)

Hahahaha I thought so! I’m saddened by its’ answer