Carbohydrate Maldigestion and Intolerance.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to explore the potential role of a gluten-free diet as part of a 'bottom-up' approach to managing symptoms in patients with irritable bowel disease (IBS).
Results Summary
The study suggests that a gluten-free diet may be considered as an initial approach in a low-FODMAP diet strategy for IBS, but it does not provide specific efficacy data for gluten-free diets alone. The abstract emphasizes the need for dietary supervision to avoid gut microbiota and nutritional imbalances.
Population
Patients with irritable bowel disease (IBS).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
malabsorbed carbohydrates | increase | production of short-chain fatty acids and gas | - | - | are fermented by colonic bacteria | #1 |
malabsorbed carbohydrates | decrease | colonic pH | - | - | lowering | #2 |
sugar challenge | increase | severity of symptoms | patients with irritable bowel disease (IBS) | - | higher | #3 |
diet low in 'Fermentable, Oligo-Di- and Monosaccharides and Polyols' (FODMAPs) | decrease | global symptoms and abdominal pain | patients with irritable bowel disease (IBS) | - | effective treatment for | #4 |
low-FODMAP diet | no change | gut microbiota and nutritional status | - | - | avoid an alteration of | #5 |
This review summarizes dietary carbohydrate intolerance conditions and recent advances on the possible role of carbohydrate maldigestion and dietary outcomes in patients with functional bowel disease. When malabsorbed carbohydrates reach the colon, they are fermented by colonic bacteria, with the production of short-chain fatty acids and gas lowering colonic pH. The appearance of diarrhoea or symptoms of flatulence depends in part on the balance between the production and elimination of these fermentation products. Different studies have shown that there are no differences in the frequency of sugar malabsorption between patients with irritable bowel disease (IBS) and healthy controls; however, the severity of symptoms after a sugar challenge is higher in patients than in controls. A diet low in 'Fermentable, Oligo-Di- and Monosaccharides and Polyols' (FODMAPs) is an effective treatment for global symptoms and abdominal pain in IBS, but its implementation should be supervised by a trained dietitian. A 'bottom-up' approach to the low-FODMAP diet has been suggested to avoid an alteration of gut microbiota and nutritional status. Two approaches have been suggested in this regard: starting with only certain subgroups of the low-FODMAP diet based on dietary history or with a gluten-free diet.