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Irritable bowel syndrome: can nutrient manipulation help?

Eduard Cabré
Review Current opinion in clinical nutrition and metabolic care 2010 22 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Review
Población
IBS patients
Intervención
Irritable bowel syndrome: can nutrient manipulation help? 20 g/d
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
None
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: To describe the evidences for the usefulness of dietary manipulations (including the use of probiotics and prebiotics) in the management of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). RECENT FINDINGS: Exclusion diets do not have a role in the management of these patients except in the case of malabsorbed sugars (lactose, fructose). However, recent work suggests that excluding these sugars is more effective in non-IBS than in IBS patients. Also, the first small open series on the use of very low (20 g/day) carbohydrate diet (VLCD) in IBS has been published with promising results. However, safety concerns do not allow us to recommend them. In the period of review, further evidence has been provided on the role of psyllium in IBS. Also, the available evidence on the use of probiotics in IBS has been meta-analyzed. SUMMARY: IBS patients should eat a balanced diet without restrictions, and (except for malabsorbed sugars) exclusion diets are not useful in most of them. The role of VLCD remains to be established. The concept that increasing fiber intake is useful for IBS may not be true for all patients, and hydrophilic colloids (e.g. psyllium) are preferred. There is growing evidence for the effectiveness of probiotics in IBS.

TL;DR

IBS patients should eat a balanced diet without restrictions, and exclusion diets are not useful in most of them, and the concept that increasing fiber intake is useful for IBS may not be true for all patients, and hydrophilic colloids are preferred.

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