Low Fermentable Oligo- Di- and Mono-Saccharides and Polyols (FODMAPs) or Gluten Free Diet: What Is Best for Irritable Bowel Syndrome?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- IBS with predominant diarrhea (IBS-D): >25% of bowel movements with Bristol stool form types 6–7;
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- IBS with predominant constipation (IBS-C): >25% of bowel movements with Bristol stool form types 1–2
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- IBS with mixed bowel habits (IBS-M): >25% of bowel movements with Bristol stool form types 1 or 2 and >25% of bowel movements with Bristol stool form types 6 or 7.
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- The difficulty in establishing an effective blinding. This is because over the years IBS patients continue or simply come to know many diets commonly suggested for IBS therapy. This makes it difficult to create a blind trial as the patients often recognize these different diets when they are suggested to the patients.
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- The unclear adherence rates, except for very expensive and complex studies, such as trials that provide patients with all the food needed for the study.
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- The unclear evidence about the right length of wash out period in crossover studies in order to avoid carry over effects on symptoms and also on gut microbiota.
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- IBS dietary trials are rarely supported by pharmaceutical companies or investors as IBS is not seen as a profitable business.
2. Gluten Free Diet
3. Low FODMAP Diet
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- By increasing the small bowel water content as they are osmotically active;
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- By increasing the production of gas through bacterial fermentation;
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- By increasing the production of bacterial metabolites such as Short-Chain Fatty Acids (SCFAs).
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- be complex and difficult to teach and learn, because it consists of several steps and requires time, motivation and the involvement of an expert in nutritional matters;
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- be potentially expensive, due to the choice of more expensive, and difficult to find alternative foods;
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- reduce the normal intake of natural prebiotics, strongly modifying the gut microbiota;
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- increase the risk of constipation, limiting fiber intake;
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- be nutritionally inadequate;
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- favor the onset of or precipitate an eating disorder behavior;
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- be ineffective in the long term.
4. Non-Celiac Gluten/Wheat Sensitivity and IBS
5. Gluten Free Diet vs. Low FODMAP Diet
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Allowed Foods | Forbidden Foods |
---|---|
Corn | Wheat |
Potatoes | Barley |
Rice | Rye |
Millet | Malt |
Buckwheat | Kamut |
Quinoa | Spelt |
Amaranth | Triticale |
Teff | Bulgur |
Oats, if free from contamination | Beer Malt |
Patients | Methods | Evaluated Parameters | Results | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Wahnschaffe et al. [24] 2001 | IBS-D = 26 | 6 months GFD | Stool frequency IgA anti-gliadin IgA anti-tTG IEL count HLA DQ2 | Improved stool frequency in patients with HLA DQ2. |
Wahnschaffe et al. [25] 2007 | IBS-D = 41 | 6 months GFD | Stool Frequency IBS symptoms questionnaire (Likert) HLA DQ2 | Stool frequency and GI symptom score returned to normal values in 60% of IBS patients who were positive and in 12% who were negative for HLA DQ2. |
Biesiekierski et al. [26] 2011 | IBS = 34 | 6 weeks gluten or placebo containing bread with GFD | HLA DQ2/8 IBS symptoms questionnaire (VAS) | 56% having HLA DQ2/8. 68% in the gluten group reported that symptoms were not adequately controlled compared with 40% on placebo. |
Vazquez-Roque et al. [27] 2013 | IBS-D = 45 | 4 weeks gluten containing diet or GFD | Bowel function Small bowel and colonic transit Lactulose and mannitol excretion HLA DQ2/8 | The gluten containing diet increased bowel frequency in HLA DQ2/8 patients and was associated with higher intestinal permeability. |
Aziz et al. [28] 2015 | IBS-D = 41 | 6 weeks GFD | IBS-SSS HADS FIS SF-36 HLA DQ2/8 | GFD reduced IBS-SSS by ≥50 points in 71%. HLA DQ2/8 positive subjects had a greater reduction in depression score and increase in vitality score. |
Shahbazkhani et al. [29] 2015 | IBS = 72 | 6 weeks GFD + 6 weeks gluten powder or placebo | IBS symptoms questionnaire (VAS) | Improvement was statistically different in the gluten containing group compared with placebo group in 25% and 83% patients, respectively. |
Zanwar et al. [30] 2016 | IBS = 60 | 4 weeks GFD + 4 weeks washout + 4 weeks DBPC rechallenge | IBS symptoms questionnaire (VAS) | Gluten group scored significantly higher in abdominal pain, bloating and tiredness and their symptoms worsened within 1 week of the rechallenge. |
Barmeyer et al. [31] 2017 | IBS-D/M = 35 | 4 months GFD | SGA IBS-SSS IBS-QoL EQ-5D HLA DQ2/8 | HLA DQ2/8 was not associated with wheat sensitivity. 34% of the patients reported considerably or completely relieved symptoms on the GFD. |
Paduano et al. [32] 2019 | IBS = 42 | 4 weeks LFD + 4 weeks GFD + 4 weeks Mediterranean diet | Bristol stool scale IBS-SSS IBS-QoL IBS symptom questionnaire (VAS) SF-12 | After GFD, improvement in symptoms, in particular, VAS bloating, VAS pain and IBS-SSS, with a smaller improvement in bloating compared to the low FODMAP diet, but with an adherence index of only 11%. |
Pinto-Sanchez et al. [33] 2020 | IBS = 50 | 4 weeks GFD | GI transit Birmingham IBS questionnaire Bristol Stool Scale HADS STAI-TAY PHQ-15 PGWB Anti-gliadin | After the GFD, patients with anti-gliadin reported less diarrhea. IBS symptoms improved in 75% of the patients with anti-gliadin and in 38% without the antibodies. GI transit normalized in a higher proportion of patients with anti-gliadin. |
Food Categories | Allowed Foods | Forbidden Foods |
---|---|---|
Cereals | Rice, porridge, oats, quinoa, tapioca, millet, amaranth, buckwheat, gluten-free bread and cereals, potato-flour. | Bread and bakery products, biscuits, croissants, pasta, wheat flour, Kamut, barley, rye, couscous, flour, muesli. |
Milk and derivates | Lactose-free milk, rice milk, oat milk, soy milk and all vegetable drinks, yogurt lactose free, soy yogurt, Greek yogurt, hard cheeses, fruit sorbets. | Cow milk, goat milk, yogurt with lactose, fresh cheeses, butter, ice cream, cream. |
Vegetables | Carrot, pumpkin, Chinese cabbage, celery, lettuce, spinach, potato, tomato, zucchini, eggplant, green bean, beets, red pepper, herbs, olives, bamboo shoot, fresh herbs. | Asparagus, cauliflower, garlic, onion, shallot, mushroom, leek, chicory, fennel, artichoke, Brussel sprout, broccoli, radish, pepper, turnips, Jerusalem artichoke. |
Legumes | Peas, soy products. | Beans, chickpeas, lentils, soybeans. |
Fruit | Banana, blueberry, strawberry, raspberry, grape, melon, grapefruit, kiwi, orange, lemon, limes, pineapple, passion fruit. | Apple, pear, watermelon, mango, apricot, avocado, cherry, peach, plum, persimmon, lychee, fruit juices. |
Dried fruits | Almonds, hazelnuts, walnuts, pine nuts. | Pistachios, cashews. |
Sweeteners | White sugar, brown sugar, maple syrup. | Agave, honey, fructose, xylitol, maltitol, mannitol, sorbitol. |
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Bellini, M.; Tonarelli, S.; Mumolo, M.G.; Bronzini, F.; Pancetti, A.; Bertani, L.; Costa, F.; Ricchiuti, A.; de Bortoli, N.; Marchi, S.; et al. Low Fermentable Oligo- Di- and Mono-Saccharides and Polyols (FODMAPs) or Gluten Free Diet: What Is Best for Irritable Bowel Syndrome? Nutrients 2020, 12, 3368. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12113368
Bellini M, Tonarelli S, Mumolo MG, Bronzini F, Pancetti A, Bertani L, Costa F, Ricchiuti A, de Bortoli N, Marchi S, et al. Low Fermentable Oligo- Di- and Mono-Saccharides and Polyols (FODMAPs) or Gluten Free Diet: What Is Best for Irritable Bowel Syndrome? Nutrients. 2020; 12(11):3368. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12113368
Chicago/Turabian StyleBellini, Massimo, Sara Tonarelli, Maria Gloria Mumolo, Francesco Bronzini, Andrea Pancetti, Lorenzo Bertani, Francesco Costa, Angelo Ricchiuti, Nicola de Bortoli, Santino Marchi, and et al. 2020. "Low Fermentable Oligo- Di- and Mono-Saccharides and Polyols (FODMAPs) or Gluten Free Diet: What Is Best for Irritable Bowel Syndrome?" Nutrients 12, no. 11: 3368. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12113368
APA StyleBellini, M., Tonarelli, S., Mumolo, M. G., Bronzini, F., Pancetti, A., Bertani, L., Costa, F., Ricchiuti, A., de Bortoli, N., Marchi, S., & Rossi, A. (2020). Low Fermentable Oligo- Di- and Mono-Saccharides and Polyols (FODMAPs) or Gluten Free Diet: What Is Best for Irritable Bowel Syndrome? Nutrients, 12(11), 3368. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12113368