Nutrition in inflammatory bowel disease.
Study Design
- Studientyp
- Review
- Population
- IBD patients
- Intervention
- Nutrition in inflammatory bowel disease. Nutritional support for IBD
- Vergleichsgruppe
- None
- Primärer Endpunkt
- Nutritional management in IBD
- Wirkungsrichtung
- Positive
- Verzerrungsrisiko
- Unclear
Abstract
Nutritional derangements are frequent in inflammatory bowel disease. In the past year significant work has been published examining the mechanisms of impaired food intake in animal models of inflammatory bowel disease, which allow a better understanding of these processes. Data from the same laboratory have shed further light on the relative role of underfeeding and inflammation on the growth retardation associated with intestinal inflammation. Other studies have provided further data on the risk factors and predictive biomarkers of bone loss in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. The potential role of enteral nutrition as primary therapy for Crohn's disease is particularly addressed in this review. Recent contributions to the field emphasized the special importance of this modality of therapy in paediatric patients. The possible mechanisms for such a therapeutic action are not well understood. Other nutrients may have a therapeutic potential in inflammatory bowel disease. In particular, recent data on the in-vivo anti-inflammatory actions of butyrate merit special mention. Finally, novel nutritional therapeutic strategies for inflammatory bowel disease, such as transforming growth factor-beta2-enriched enteral feeding, or hydrothermally processed cereals have recently been explored.
Zusammenfassung
The potential role of enteral nutrition as primary therapy for Crohn's disease is particularly addressed in this review, and recent data on the in-vivo anti-inflammatory actions of butyrate merit special mention.
Used In Evidence Reviews
Similar Papers
Frontiers in immunology · 2019
Short Chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs)-Mediated Gut Epithelial and Immune Regulation and Its Relevance for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America · 2014
The microbial metabolite butyrate regulates intestinal macrophage function via histone deacetylase inhibition.
Gut · 2014
A decrease of the butyrate-producing species Roseburia hominis and Faecalibacterium prausnitzii defines dysbiosis in patients with ulcerative colitis.
Gut · 2011
Dysbiosis of the faecal microbiota in patients with Crohn's disease and their unaffected relatives.
World journal of gastroenterology · 2018
Relationship between intestinal microbiota and ulcerative colitis: Mechanisms and clinical application of probiotics and fecal microbiota transplantation.
Digestion · 2016