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Laxative effects of wheat bran and psyllium: Resolving enduring misconceptions about fiber in treatment guidelines for chronic idiopathic constipation.

Johnson W McRorie, George C Fahey, Roger D Gibb, William D Chey
Review Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners 2020 33 sitasi
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Jenis Studi
Randomized Controlled Trial
Populasi
Constipation patients
Intervensi
Laxative effects of wheat bran and psyllium: Resolving enduring misconceptions about fiber in treatment guidelines for chronic idiopathic constipation. None
Pembanding
None
Luaran Utama
effects of two isolated fibers, coarse wheat bran and psyllium, on stool outp...
Arah Efek
Negative
Risiko Bias
Unclear

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Treatment guidelines for chronic idiopathic constipation (CIC) recommend an "increase in fiber intake" as a first-line therapy, but most epidemiologic studies fail to support an association between a high-fiber diet and a reduced risk of constipation. Furthermore, randomized controlled clinical studies show that most isolated fibers (e.g., supplements) are not different from placebo for a laxative effect, and several may be constipating. OBJECTIVES: The objective of this review was to compare the effects of two isolated fibers, coarse wheat bran and psyllium, on stool output and stool water content in patients with CIC. This review will also address misconceptions about fiber that are perpetuated by treatment guidelines. DATA SOURCES: A comprehensive literature review was conducted with the use of the Scopus, SciFinder, and PubMed scientific databases, limited to the previous 50 years (1968-2018; latest date included, December 31, 2018). CONCLUSIONS: In patients with CIC, nonfermented gel-forming psyllium was 3.4 times more effective than insoluble wheat bran for increasing stool output. Both psyllium and coarse wheat bran increased stool water content, a stool-softening effect, but finely ground wheat bran decreased stool water content, a stool-hardening effect. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: It is a misconception that dietary fiber and all isolated fibers provide a laxative effect in patients with CIC. Our analysis suggests that treatment guidelines for CIC should make specific evidence-based recommendations as it pertains to fiber. To do otherwise takes the risk of perpetuating myth and misunderstanding and depriving patients of an effective therapy for CIC. A generic recommendation to "increase fiber intake" is akin to a recommendation to "increase pill intake" without regard to therapeutic or adverse effects.

TL;DR

Comparing the effects of two isolated fibers, coarse wheat bran and psyllium, on stool output and stool water content in patients with chronic idiopathic constipation suggests that treatment guidelines for CIC should make specific evidence-based recommendations as it pertains to fiber.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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