1.
Confocal endomicroscopy shows food-associated changes in the intestinal mucosa of patients with irritable bowel syndrome.
Fritscher-Ravens, A, Schuppan, D, Ellrichmann, M, Schoch, S, Röcken, C, Brasch, J, Bethge, J, Böttner, M, Klose, J, Milla, PJ
Gastroenterology. 2014;(5):1012-20.e4
Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS We investigated suspected food intolerances in patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) using confocal laser endomicroscopy (CLE) for real-time visualization of structural/functional changes in the intestinal mucosa after food challenge. Patients with functional changes after food challenge (CLE+) were placed on personalized exclusion diets and followed up for long-term symptom relief. METHODS Thirty-six IBS patients with suspected food intolerance and 10 patients with Barrett's esophagus (controls) without IBS symptoms were examined by CLE at University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein (Kiel, Germany). Diluted food antigens were administered directly to the duodenal mucosa through the working channel of the endoscope. Epithelial breaks, intervillous spaces, and the number of intraepithelial lymphocytes (IEL) were measured before and after the food challenge. CLE+ patients were placed on exclusion diets, given symptom score questionnaires, and followed up for 1 year; controls resumed their previous diet. RESULTS CLE showed a real-time response to food antigens in 22 of 36 patients; no responses were observed in 14 of 36 patients (CLE-) or any of the controls. Baseline IELs were significantly higher in CLE+ than CLE- subjects (P = .004); numbers increased significantly after food challenge (P = .0008). Within 5 minutes of exposure of CLE+ patients to food antigens, IELs increased, epithelial leaks/gaps formed, and intervillous spaces widened. Epithelial leaks and intervillous spaces also increased significantly in CLE+ vs baseline (both P < .001). The concordance of IELs measured by CLE and conventional histology was 70.6%; they did not correlate (P = .89; r(2) = 0.027). Symptom scores improved more than 50% in CLE+ patients after a 4-week exclusion diet and increased to 74% at 12 months; symptoms continued in CLE- patients. CONCLUSIONS Based on CLE analysis of IBS patients with a suspected food intolerance, exposure to candidate food antigens caused immediate breaks, increased intervillous spaces, and increased IELs in the intestinal mucosa. These changes are associated with patient responses to exclusion diets. Registered at clinicaltrials.gov (registration number: NCT01692613).
2.
Effect of nutrition and atherogenic index on the occurrence and intensity of insulin resistance.
Ostrowska, L, Witczak, K, Adamska, E
Polskie Archiwum Medycyny Wewnetrznej. 2013;(6):289-96
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Diet is one of the factors that can stimulate genetic predisposition and, in consequence, lead to insulin resistance. An adequate supply of nutrients and energy-rich diet as well as increased physical activity are the most effective methods to prevent metabolic disorders. OBJECTIVES The objective of this study was to determine whether there are any associations between nutrition and the occurrence of insulin resistance. PATIENTS AND METHODS The study included 143 individuals. Fasting glucose and insulin levels were measured and the HOMA-IR index was calculated for each patient. Nondiabetic patients were divided into the study and control groups. We conducted anthropometric measurements (body mass, height, and waist circumference), biochemical analysis (fasting glucose and insulin), and dietary interview. RESULTS We observed a negative correlation between the percentage of sucrose in the diet and the HOMA-IR value, and a positive correlation between the percentage of protein intake and the HOMA-IR value. Moreover, there was a significantly higher intake of lactose in men without insulin resistance compared with those with insulin resistance. CONCLUSIONS The results encourage to conduct further, more detailed research involving a larger group of patients to better understand associations between dietary content and insulin resistance.
3.
Health, wellbeing and nutritional status of older people living in UK care homes: an exploratory evaluation of changes in food and drink provision.
Kenkmann, A, Price, GM, Bolton, J, Hooper, L
BMC geriatrics. 2010;:28
Abstract
BACKGROUND Food and drink are important determinants of physical and social health in care home residents. This study explored whether a pragmatic methodology including routinely collected data was feasible in UK care homes, to describe the health, wellbeing and nutritional status of care home residents and assess effects of changed provision of food and drink at three care homes on residents' falls (primary outcome), anaemia, weight, dehydration, cognitive status, depression, lipids and satisfaction with food and drink provision. METHODS We measured health, wellbeing and nutritional status of 120 of 213 residents of six care homes in Norfolk, UK. An intervention comprising improved dining atmosphere, greater food choice, extended restaurant hours, and readily available snacks and drinks machines was implemented in three care homes. Three control homes maintained their previous system. Outcomes were assessed in the year before and the year after the changes. RESULTS Use of routinely collected data was partially successful, but loss to follow up and levels of missing data were high, limiting power to identify trends in the data. This was a frail older population (mean age 87, 71% female) with multiple varied health problems. During the first year 60% of residents had one or more falls, 40% a wound care visit, and 40% a urinary tract infection. 45% were on diuretics, 24% antidepressants, and 43% on psychotropic medication. There was a slight increase in falls from year 1 to year 2 in the intervention homes, and a much bigger increase in control homes, leading to a statistically non-significant 24% relative reduction in residents' rate of falls in intervention homes compared with control homes (adjusted rate ratio 0.76, 95% CI 0.57 to 1.02, p = 0.06). CONCLUSIONS Care home residents are frail and experience multiple health risks. This intervention to improve food and drink provision was well received by residents, but effects on health indicators (despite the relative reduction in falls rate) were inconclusive, partly due to problems with routine data collection and loss to follow up. Further research with more homes is needed to understand which, if any, components of the intervention may be successful.
4.
Antioxidant vitamins reduce acute meal-induced memory deficits in adults with type 2 diabetes.
Chui, MH, Greenwood, CE
Nutrition research (New York, N.Y.). 2008;(7):423-9
Abstract
Memory impairment is observed in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), with further acute deficits after meal ingestion. This study explored whether postprandial oxidative stress was a contributor to these meal-induced memory deficits. Sixteen adults with T2DM (mean age, 63.5 +/- 2.1 years) who were not regularly taking high-dose antioxidant supplements were fed a high-fat meal, the same test meal with vitamins C (1000 mg) and E (800 IU) tablets, or water on 3 separate occasions. After meal ingestion, a battery of cognitive tests were administered, which included measures of delayed verbal memory, assessed at 60 and 105 minutes after meal ingestion. Relative to water consumption, the high-fat meal resulted in poorer performance at 105 minutes postingestion on measures of delayed verbal recall (word list and paragraph recall) and working memory (Digit-Span Forward). Coconsumption of antioxidant vitamins and high-fat meal prevented this meal-induced deficit such that performance on these tasks was indistinguishable from that after water intake. At the same time point, a small but significant improvement on the word-naming and color-naming components of Stroop was observed after meal ingestion, relative to water, irrespective of whether antioxidants were consumed, demonstrating the specificity of meal-induced impairments to memory function. Executive function, assessed by Trails Parts A and B, was not influenced by meal or antioxidant ingestion. In adults with T2DM, coconsumption of antioxidant vitamins minimizes meal-induced memory impairment, implicating oxidative stress as a potential contributor to these decrements.