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Increasing Symptoms in Irritable Bowel Symptoms With Ingestion of Galacto-Oligosaccharides Are Mitigated by α-Galactosidase Treatment.

C J Tuck, K M Taylor, P R Gibson, J S Barrett, J G Muir
RCT The American journal of gastroenterology 2018 49 trích dẫn
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Loại nghiên cứu
Randomized Controlled Trial
Cỡ mẫu
31
Đối tượng nghiên cứu
IBS patients (Rome III, H2 producers)
Thời gian
2.0 weeks
Can thiệp
Increasing Symptoms in Irritable Bowel Symptoms With Ingestion of Galacto-Oligosaccharides Are Mitigated by α-Galactosidase Treatment. 300 GALU or 150 GALU
Đối chứng
Placebo (glucose)
Kết quả chính
GI symptom severity on VAS
Xu hướng hiệu quả
Positive
Nguy cơ sai lệch
Moderate

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Galacto-oligosaccharides (GOS) are dietary FODMAPs (fermentable carbohydrates) associated with triggering gastrointestinal symptoms in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over trial aimed to assess whether oral α-galactosidase co-ingestion with foods high in GOS and low in other FODMAPs would reduce symptoms. METHODS: Patients meeting the Rome III criteria for IBS who were hydrogen-producers on breath testing were recruited. Participants were treated with full-dose (300 GALU (galactosidic units) α-galactosidase) and half-dose enzyme (150 GALU α-galactosidase), and placebo (glucose) in a random order with ≤14 days washout between arms. Following a 3-day low FODMAP run-in period, participants consumed provided diets high in GOS for a further 3-days. Gastrointestinal symptoms were measured daily using a 100 mm visual-analogue-scale, and breath samples taken hourly on the second last day with hydrogen content analysed as area-under-the-curve. RESULTS: Thirty-one patients with IBS (20 IBS-D, 4 IBS-C, 7 IBS-M) completed the study. The addition of high GOS foods resulted in a significant increase in overall symptoms with 21 patients exhibiting GOS-sensitivity (>10 mm increase for overall symptoms). Of those, full-dose enzyme reduced overall symptoms (median 24. 5(IQR 17.5-35.8) vs. 5.5(1.5-15.0) mm; P=0.006) and bloating (20.5(9.5-42.0) vs. 6.5(2.0-15.8); P=0.017). Breath hydrogen production was minimal with no differences seen between placebo and full-dose (P=0.597). CONCLUSIONS: Oral α-galactosidase taken with high GOS foods provides a clinically significant reduction in symptoms in GOS-sensitive individuals with IBS. This strategy can be translated into practice to improve tolerance to high GOS foods as an adjunct therapy to the low FODMAP diet.

Tóm lược

Oral α-galactosidase taken with high G OS foods provides a clinically significant reduction in symptoms in GOS-sensitive individuals with IBS, and this strategy can be translated into practice to improve tolerance to high GOS foods as an adjunct therapy to the low FODMAP diet.

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