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A randomized trial of inulin for bowel symptoms, depression and quality of life in constipation predominant IBS.

Çağlar Akçalı, Aslı Uçar, Kadri Atay
RCT Scientific reports 2025 2 citas
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Randomized Controlled Trial
Tamaño de muestra
34
Población
Adults with constipation-predominant IBS
Duración
8 weeks
Intervención
A randomized trial of inulin for bowel symptoms, depression and quality of life in constipation predominant IBS. 9.2 g/day total (4.6 g twice daily)
Comparador
Maltodextrin 9.2 g/day placebo
Resultado primario
IBS-SSS score and IBS-QoL score
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
Moderate

Abstract

This study was conducted to evaluate the effect of inulin on bowel symptoms, depression and quality of life in individuals with constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. This study was designed as a randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial with a parallel design and a 1:1 allocation ratio. Individuals (n = 34) aged between 21 and 63 years with constipation-predominant IBS were included in the study. Individuals were randomly assigned to two groups: the prebiotic group (n = 17), which received a 50%/50% mixture of inulin/oligofructose (4.6 g twice daily, for a total daily dose of 9.2 g), and the placebo group (n = 17), which total received 9.2 g of maltodextrin per day. The intervention period was 8 weeks. Bristol Stool Scale, IBS-Visual Analogue Scale (IBS-VAS), IBS-Symptom Severity Score Scale (IBS-SSS), IBS-Quality of Life Scale (IBS-QoL) and Beck Depression Scale were administered to the participants at the beginning, 1st month and 2nd month. As a result, total IBS-QoL score increased in the prebiotic group (61.0 ± 19.4 to 77.4 ± 15.1; p < 0.006), whereas total IBS-SSS score decreased (267.3 ± 56.0 to 195.8 ± 59.0; p < 0.026). In the prebiotic group, significant improvement was observed in the IBS-VAS parameters of constipation status (2.2 ± 2.3 to 4.9 ± 2.5; p < 0.042group×time), psychological state (7 (2-10) to 9 (5-10); p < 0.006). It is thought that inulin may have beneficial effects on reducing symptom severity and frequency and on quality of life in individuals with IBS in whom constipation is predominant.

TL;DR

It is thought that inulin may have beneficial effects on reducing symptom severity and frequency and on quality of life in individuals with IBS in whom constipation is predominant.

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