Faecal microbial flora and disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis during a vegan diet.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to determine whether a vegan diet rich in lactobacilli could alter the faecal flora and improve rheumatoid arthritis (RA) activity in patients.
Results Summary
The study found that the vegan diet significantly changed the faecal microbial flora in RA patients, and these changes were associated with improvements in RA activity, particularly in patients with a high improvement index. No significant changes were observed in the control group.
Population
43 rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients.
Effective Dosage
Not specified (uncooked vegan diet rich in lactobacilli).
Duration
1 month.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
living food, a form of uncooked vegan diet rich in lactobacilli | increase | faecal flora | RA patients | P = 0.001 | a significant, diet-induced change | #1 |
living food, a form of uncooked vegan diet rich in lactobacilli | increase | faecal flora | RA patients with a high improvement index (HI) | P = 0.001 | a significant difference | #2 |
living food, a form of uncooked vegan diet rich in lactobacilli | decrease | RA activity | RA patients | - | changes | #3 |
ordinary omnivorous diets | no change | faecal flora | RA patients | - | not observed | #4 |
To clarify the role of the faecal flora in the diet-induced decrease of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) activity, 43 RA patients were randomized into two groups: the test group to receive living food, a form of uncooked vegan diet rich in lactobacilli, and the control group to continue their ordinary omnivorous diets. Based on clinical assessments before, during and after the intervention period, a disease improvement index was constructed for each patient. According to the index, patients were assigned either to a group with a high improvement index (HI) or to a group with a low improvement index (LO). Stool samples collected from each patient before the intervention and at 1 month were analysed by direct stool sample gas-liquid chromatography of bacterial cellular fatty acids. This method has proved to be a simple and sensitive way to detect changes and differences in the faecal microbial flora between individual stool samples or groups of them. A significant, diet-induced change in the faecal flora (P = 0.001) was observed in the test group, but not in the control group. Further, in the test group, a significant (P = 0.001) difference was detected between the HI and LO categories at 1 month, but not in the pre-test samples. We conclude that a vegan diet changes the faecal microbial flora in RA patients, and changes in the faecal flora are associated with improvement in RA activity.