Minkevich Method

The Minkevich method is a way to combat the deficiency of microbes in the human body. It was first developed by Soviet microbiologist Igor Minkevich in the 1920s. Since then, this method has become widely used in medicine for the treatment of various diseases associated with insufficient activity of its own microbes: staphylococcal folliculitis, furunculosis, tonsillitis.

The Minkevich method for the patient includes several stages. First, the doctor diagnoses the patient's body to find out if he has a microbial deficiency. If so, he prescribes treatment, which may include antibiotics, serums, vitamins or other medications. He then recommends special dishes to the patient that contain bacteria that help him maintain his own microflora. The doctor may also recommend taking a course of tablets containing beneficial microbes isolated from a special nutrient medium. Finally, the doctor may prescribe drugs or other ways to stimulate the growth of microbes to increase the number of microbes in the patient's body.

The essence of the Minkevich method is an attempt to fill various voids in the body by adding living microorganisms to it, if there were none in it. In addition, the Minkevich method includes correction of the general condition of the body using various biological



The Minkevich method is a Soviet microbiological method for determining the bactericidal and bacteriostatic properties of various substances. The method is named after the Soviet microbiologist and immunologist Stanislav Abramovich Minkevich. It is believed that in modern conditions it is used only by historians of microbiology.

Stanislav Abra