The low-FODMAP diet for irritable bowel syndrome: Lights and shadows.
Study Goal
The researchers compared the effectiveness of a low-FODMAP diet versus a gluten-free diet for managing IBS symptoms, particularly in patients with non-celiac gluten sensitivity.
Results Summary
The study found that a low-FODMAP diet was superior to a gluten-free diet for alleviating IBS symptoms, especially abdominal bloating, pain, and diarrhea. The gluten-free diet showed limited efficacy in comparison.
Population
Patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), particularly those with non-celiac gluten sensitivity.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
low Fermentable Oligo-, Di-, Monosaccharides And Polyols (FODMAP) diet | decrease | gastrointestinal symptoms | IBS | - | effective intervention for reducing | #1 |
low-FODMAP diet | decrease | IBS symptoms | - | 70% | high effectiveness | #2 |
low-FODMAP diet | neutral | - | patients with non-celiac gluten sensitivity | - | superior to | #3 |
low FODMAP diet | decrease | gut microbiota | - | - | significant gut microbiota reduction | #4 |
low FODMAP diet | no change | - | - | - | lack of advantage over | #5 |
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) affects 10-15% of the western population. Drug therapy for this entity has shown limited efficacy. The low Fermentable Oligo-, Di-, Monosaccharides And Polyols (FODMAP) diet has recently emerged as an effective intervention for reducing gastrointestinal symptoms in IBS. Currently, several mechanistic studies have proven the rational basis of carbohydrate restriction. In addition, high-quality evidence (prospective studies and randomized controlled trials) from a variety of countries supports the high effectiveness of a low-FODMAP diet for IBS symptoms (70%), especially abdominal bloating, pain, and diarrhea. Importantly, this diet seems to be superior to a gluten-free diet for patients with non-celiac gluten sensitivity. The most controversial features of the low FODMAP diet are its short- and long-term limitations (a high level of restriction, the need for monitoring by an expert dietitian, potential nutritional deficiencies, significant gut microbiota reduction, lack of predictors of response), as well as the potential lack of advantage over alternative dietary, pharmacological and psychological interventions for IBS. Although liberalization of carbohydrate intake is recommended in the long-term, the reintroduction process remains to be clarified as, theoretically, global carbohydrate restriction is deemed to be necessary to avoid additive effects.