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Watch Taking Control: A Guide to Managing IBS
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The Gut Project
 
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Is Sugar Triggering Your IBS?

Malabsorption of carbohydrates including lactose, fructose, and sorbitol has already been described in normal volunteers and in patients with functional bowel complaints including irritable bowel syndrome.

Researchers in Israel set out to examine the importance of carbohydrate malabsorption in outpatients, previously diagnosed as having functional bowel disorders, and to estimate the degree of clinical improvement following dietary restriction of the malabsorbed sugar(s).

In this study, 239 patients with functional bowel complaints were divided into a group of 94 patients who met the Rome criteria for irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and a second group of 145 patients who did not fulfill the criteria and were defined as functional complaints (FC). Lactose (18 g), fructose (25 g) and a mixture of fructose (25 g) plus sorbitol (5 g) solutions were administered at weekly intervals. End-expiratory hydrogen and methane breath samples were collected at thirty-minute intervals for 4 hours. Incomplete absorption was defined as an increment in breath hydrogen of at least 20 ppm, or its equivalent in methane of at least 5 ppm. All patients received a diet without the offending sugar(s) for one month.

Only 7% of patients with IBS and 8% of patients with FC absorbed all three sugars normally. The frequency of isolated lactose malabsorption was 16% and 12% respectively. The association of lactose and fructose-sorbitol malabsorption occurred in 61% of both patient groups. The frequency of sugar malabsorption among patients in both groups was 78% for lactose malabsorption (IBS 82%, FC 75%), 44% for fructose malabsorption and 73% for fructose-sorbitol malabsorption (IBS 70%, FC 75%). A marked improvement occurred in 56% of IBS and 60% of FC patients following dietary restriction. The number of symptoms decreased significantly in both groups (P < 0.01) and correlated with the improvement index (IBS P < 0.05, FC P < 0.025).

Therefore, the researchers conclude that combined sugar malabsorption patterns are common in functional bowel disorders and may contribute to symptomatology in most patients. Dietary restriction of the offending sugar(s) is recommended before the institution of drug therapy.

Staff Writers
First published in The Inside Tract® Newsletter Issue 134 November/December 2002

Reference:


Isr Med Assoc J 2000 Aug;2(8):583-7

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