101. Evidence-Based and Emerging Dietary Approaches to Upper Disorders of Gut–Brain Interaction.
- Author
-
Tack, Jan, Tornblom, Hans, Tan, Victoria, and Carbone, Florencia
- Subjects
- *
MEDITERRANEAN diet , *WHEAT quality , *ELEMENTAL diet , *DISACCHARIDES , *OLIGOSACCHARIDES , *MONOSACCHARIDES , *FRUCTANS - Abstract
Food ingestion is a major symptom trigger in functional esophageal and gastroduodenal disorders and gastroparesis. This review summarizes current knowledge and identifies areas of research on the role of food factors and the opportunities for dietary intervention in these disorders. While many patients experiencing functional esophageal and gastroduodenal disorders identify specific food items as symptom triggers, available data do not allow the identification of specific nutrient groups that are more likely to induce symptoms. In functional dyspepsia (FD), recent studies have shown the potential efficacy of a diet low in fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols, although the underlying mechanism of action is unclear. Reports of favorable responses to gluten elimination in patients with FD are confounded by the concomitant benefit of reduced intake of fructans, fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols present in wheat. Emerging data based on a 6-food elimination diet and confocal laser endomicroscopic evaluation of mucosal responses to food proteins suggest a role for duodenal allergic reactions in FD symptom generation. In patients with gastroparesis, a low-residue diet has been shown to improve symptoms. Novel dietary approaches under evaluation are the Mediterranean diet and the heating/cooling diet approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF