| Literature DB >> 29495569 |
Mattea Müller1, Emanuel E Canfora2, Ellen E Blaak3.
Abstract
Gastrointestinal transit time may be an important determinant of glucose homeostasis and metabolic health through effects on nutrient absorption and microbial composition, among other mechanisms. Modulation of gastrointestinal transit may be one of the mechanisms underlying the beneficial health effects of dietary fibers. These effects include improved glucose homeostasis and a reduced risk of developing metabolic diseases such as obesity and type 2 diabetes mellitus. In this review, we first discuss the regulation of gastric emptying rate, small intestinal transit and colonic transit as well as their relation to glucose homeostasis and metabolic health. Subsequently, we briefly address the reported health effects of different dietary fibers and discuss to what extent the fiber-induced health benefits may be mediated through modulation of gastrointestinal transit.Entities:
Keywords: dietary fiber; gastrointestinal transit; microbiota; obesity; type 2 diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29495569 PMCID: PMC5872693 DOI: 10.3390/nu10030275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Summary of human intervention studies with viscous dietary fiber on GE rate and postprandial glucose metabolism.
| Participants | Design | Intervention | Method | GE Rate | Metabolic Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 13 healthy adults (6 men, 7 women) | 2-week isocaloric low-fiber diet followed by 4-week low fiber diet + supplement | 20 g/day apple pectin baked in muffins or 20 g/day cellulose supplement as control fiber | Scintigraphy | ↑ T1/2 | ↔ glucose | [ |
| 12 non-insulin dependent T2DM patients (7 men, 5 women) | 2-week isocaloric low-fiber diet followed by 4-week low fiber diet + supplement | 20 g/day apple pectin baked in muffins | Scintigraphy | ↑ T1/2 | ↓ iAUC glucose | [ |
| 7 male T2DM patients (BMI 20–30 kg/m2) | Acute crossover study | 5 g sodium-alginate, control drink without supplement | Scintigraphy Semi-solid meal (340 kcal, 48% CHO, 13% protein, 39% fat) | ↑ T1/2 | ↓ postprandial peak insulin | [ |
| 10 healthy men | Acute crossover study | 2 g agar or 4 g pectin, control drink without supplement | 13C-acetate breath test | ↑ T1/2 ↑ Tlag | ↔ AUC glucose | [ |
| 10 healthy adults (4 men, 6 woman) | 8 Acute crossover study | Pasta meal supplemented with 1.7 g psyllium and with or without added sunflower oil | Paracetamol absorption | ↔ AUC paracetamol | ↔ glucose | [ |
| 15 healthy adults (3 men, 12 women) | Acute crossover study | High molecular weight 12.8 g, β-glucan (25% purity), low molecular weight 3.6 g β-glucan (75% purity), control without supplement | 13C-acetate breath test | ↑ T1/2
| ↓ iAUC0–60min | [ |
CHO carbohydrate; T1/2 gastric emptying half time; Tlag initial gastric emptying rate; AUC area under the curve; iAUC incremental area under the curve; % Percentage of total energy intake.
Figure 1The complex relationship between dietary fiber intake, the gastrointestinal tract and host metabolism. Viscous fibers increase gastric emptying rate, may inhibit nutrient absorption and contribute to SCFA fermentation. These effects may lead to a reduced postprandial glucose appearance and an increased release of incretin and satiety-stimulating hormones (GLP-1, PYY), which might influence energy intake and peripheral tissue metabolism. Prebiotics modulate microbiota composition and SCFA production thereby affecting energy homeostasis and insulin sensitivity. Insoluble fibers are most effective in increasing colonic transit time thereby possibly affecting microbiota composition, and vice versa microbial metabolites may stimulate colonic motility. Solid lines indicate well-studied effects of dietary fiber, dashed line indicate more controversial findings. Abbreviations: SCFA short-chain fatty acids; GLP-1 glucagon-like peptide 1; PYY peptide YY.