Doesn't appear to be true. Fatigue is possible but it is an unusual side effect.
Antibiotic treatment tends sometimes to result in sensations of fatigue and decreased physical performance. The effects of antibiotics were therefore studied in 50 healthy, male trainees, aged 18-25 years, assigned in a random, double-blind fashion to one of the following treatments...
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
We concluded that in healthy individuals, a short-term antibiotic treatment had no deleterious effect on aerobic capacity or on muscle strength and was not associated with subjective side effects.
Although they don’t affect everybody in the same way, some antibiotics may have a side effect of tiredness. Learn about all the potential side effects of antibiotics and what you can do about it.
www.healthline.com
Fatigue is not a common side effect of antibiotics. However, tiredness may be a symptom of the infection you are treating, or it may be related to one of the potential, but rare, side effects of the antibiotic.
Thanks for taking the time to respond.
Perhaps unable to see the forest because the trees are blocking your view.
Unquestionably, despite what any handful of authors portend, the vast majority of peer-reviewed evidence pertaining to physiological effects of systemic antibiotic therapy dating back to before Rosenfeld's analyses of altered nasopharyngeal microbiome ...
30 years worth...
show how and why ABX alter the microbiome. The recovered state will always eventually balance, and will always be altered.
Perhaps more than any other system, systemic ABX impact the gut flora.
There is no way you can wipe your extremely complex fuel processor and not experience a change in efficiency and effectiveness, particularly in the near term. Performance can certainly be regained, and for all we know, may in some instances even be slightly improved, although the latter is doubtful because human interventions rarely improve complex natural systems, but math suggests that it must be possible.
Not liking facts doesn't change facts.
Good luck in life. Ignoring obvious things can be fun, but rarely yields actual fruit.
My comments do not pertain to BSD's specific case, or attempt to justify anything he said.
Rather, they point out simple concepts. If you wreck the gut, there will be unavoidable consequences.
Absolutely without question, systemic ABX therapy wrecks the gut, for obvious reasons.
The chemical is designed to kill microorganisms, and it does. Nearly indiscriminately, and on a massive scale.
Thx.