Chili Peppers, Curcumins, and Prebiotics in Gastrointestinal Health and Disease.
Study Design
- Tipo di studio
- Review
- Popolazione
- GI disorder patients (capsaicin, curcumin, prebiotics)
- Intervento
- Chili Peppers, Curcumins, and Prebiotics in Gastrointestinal Health and Disease. None
- Comparatore
- None
- Esito primario
- None
- Direzione dell'effetto
- Mixed
- Rischio di bias
- Unclear
Abstract
There is growing evidence for the role of several natural products as either useful agents or adjuncts in the management of functional GI disorders (FGIDs). In this review, we examine the medical evidence for three such compounds: chili, a culinary spice; curcumin, another spice and active derivative of a root bark; and prebiotics, which are nondigestible food products. Chili may affect the pathogenesis of abdominal pain especially in functional dyspepsia and cause other symptoms. It may have a therapeutic role in FGIDs through desensitization of transient receptor potential vanilloid-1 receptor. Curcumin, the active ingredient of turmeric rhizome, has been shown in several preclinical studies and uncontrolled clinical trials as having effects on gut inflammation, gut permeability and the brain-gut axis, especially in FGIDs. Prebiotics, the non-digestible food ingredients in dietary fiber, may serve as nutrients and selectively stimulate the growth and/or activity of certain colonic bacteria. The net effect of this change on colonic microbiota may lead to the production of acidic metabolites and other compounds that help to reduce the production of toxins and suppress the growth of harmful or disease-causing enteric pathogens. Although some clinical benefit in IBS has been shown, high dose intake of prebiotics may cause more bloating from bacterial fermentation.
TL;DR
This review examines the medical evidence for three such compounds: chili, a culinary spice; curcumin, another spice and active derivative of a root bark; and prebiotics, which are nondigestible food products.
Used In Evidence Reviews
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