| Literature DB >> 32316404 |
Paolo Usai-Satta1, Gabrio Bassotti2, Massimo Bellini3, Francesco Oppia1, Mariantonia Lai4, Francesco Cabras1.
Abstract
Background: Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is frequently associated with celiac disease (CD) and nonceliac gluten/wheat sensitivity (NCGS/NCWS), but epidemiological and pathophysiological aspects are still unclear. Furthermore, a gluten-free diet (GFD) can positively influence IBS symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: celiac disease; gluten-free diet; irritable bowel syndrome; nonceliac gluten/wheat sensitivity
Year: 2020 PMID: 32316404 PMCID: PMC7231142 DOI: 10.3390/nu12041117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Summary of the most significant studies on IBS related to gluten/wheat and NCGS/NCWS.
| Authors (Ref) | Study Design | Study Method | Participants | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Potter [ | Population-based study | Multivariate analysis | 3115 | NCWS was associated with IBS (OR: 3.55) |
| Fritscher–Ravens [ | Prospective controlled study | Confocal endomicroscopy before and after wheat administration | 36 IBS | IEL and intervillous spaces increased after wheat endoscopic challenge |
| Wu [ | Double-blinded gluten challenge | Immuno-histochemistry by endoscopic biopsies | 27 IBS-D | Increased gut permeability after gluten challenge |
| Elli [ | Double-blinded trial | GFD and gluten challenge | 134 with functional disorders (77 IBS) | 14% of patients meet NCGS criteria |
| Carroccio [ | Double-blinded trial | Wheat-free diet and wheat challenge | 920 IBS | 70 IBS with NCWS |
Notes: IBS-D: irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea, GFD: gluten-free diet, NCGS: nonceliac gluten sensitivity, NCWS: nonceliac wheat sensitivity, OR: odds ratio.
Summary of the most significant studies on gluten and wheat-free diet in IBS.
| Authors (Ref) | Study Design | Study Duration | Participants | Diet Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vasquez Roque [ | RCT | 6 months | 45 IBS-D | GFD and gluten challenge | More bowel movements on gluten challenge |
| Aziz [ | Prospective study | 6 weeks | 41 IBS-D | GFD | Symptoms improved on GFD |
| Zanwar [ | DBP trial | 4 weeks | 60 IBS-D | GFD and gluten challenge | Symptoms worsened on gluten challenge |
| Elli [ | DBP trial | 3-week GFD, followed by 1-week gluten challenge | 77 IBS | GFD and gluten challenge | Symptoms improved in 71% of IBS (34% relapsed on gluten challenge) |
| Roncoroni [ | RCT | 21 days | 50 celiac patients with IBS symptoms | GFD-LFD | Better symptom impact in GFD-LFD than GFD alone |
| Biesiekierski [ | DBP trial | 2-week LFD, followed by 1 week low, high gluten or placebo | 37 IBS-NCGS | High and low gluten challenge | No gluten effect on IBS symptoms; |
| Carroccio [ | DBP trial | 5 weeks | 276 IBS and wheat sensitivity | Wheat-free diet and wheat challenge | Asymptomatic on wheat-free diet and symptoms increased on wheat challenge |
| Dionne [ | Meta-analysis | Variable | 111 GFD | GFD and LFD | Low evidence on GFD in IBS |
Notes: DBP: double-blinded placebo-controlled, RCT: randomized clinical trial, IBS-D: irritable bowel syndrome with diarrhea, GFD: gluten-free diet, LFD: low FODMAP diet; NCGS: nonceliac gluten sensitivity.