| Literature DB >> 26265051 |
Christiane Barthel1,2, Sandra Wiegand3,4, Sylvie Scharl5, Michael Scharl6,7, Pascal Frei8, Stephan R Vavricka9, Michael Fried10, Michael Christian Sulz11,12, Nico Wiegand13,14, Gerhard Rogler15,16, Luc Biedermann17.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Environmental factors are an integral component in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). There is an increasing interest in nutritive components. While the potential disease-modifying role of coffee has been intensively investigated in a variety of gastrointestinal diseases, the data on the potential impact on IBD is very limited. We aimed to determine the patients' perspective on coffee consumption in IBD.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26265051 PMCID: PMC4534065 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-015-0070-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Fig. 1Coffee consumption in 442 IBD patients. Almost three quarters of patients (72.6 %) regularly consume coffee (93.5 % caffeinated coffee, 6.5 % decaffeinated coffee). This distribution appears very similar in CD, UC and IBDU (209 of 288, 72.6 % of CD, 107 of 147, 72.8 % of UC and 5 of 7, 71.4 % of IBDU patients; IBD: Inflammatory bowel disease, CD: Crohn’s disease, UC: ulcerative colitis, IBDU: IBD unclassified)
Fig. 2Reasons for 121 IBD patients not to drink coffee. 60 % of those patients mentioned that they fear negative impact on their bowel disease. 30 % mentioned “other reasons” meaning any reason apart from the former reason. The analysis for the separate IBD subgroups show, that,compared to UC patients, both CD and IBDU patients much more often stated not drinking coffee because they experience a negative influence of coffee on their symptoms of disease
Fig. 3IBD patients’ perception about the effect of regular coffee consumption on their intestinal symptoms. Significantly more patients with CD think that coffee has an overall impact on their bowel disease, compared to UC patients as depicted by brackets combining patients attributing a positive and a negative effect. Among UC patients, the majority (about three quarters of patients) do not think that coffee has any influence at all on their symptoms. Uniformly among all IBD subtypes, if an impact of coffee on disease symptoms is attributed by patients, only a small minority of patients experience a positive influence
Fig. 4Regular coffee consumption according to the attributed impact on IBD symptoms. While it is not surprising, that the fraction of patients regularly drinking coffee is high in those patients identifying a positive impact and also no impact of coffee on their IBD, the fact that almost every second patient in the group identifying a negative influence of coffee nevertheless regularly consumes this beverage is noteworthy