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Diet and microbiome in the beginning of the sequence of gut inflammation

Daniel Ceballos, Alejandro Hernández-Camba, Laura Ramos

2021World Journal of Clinical Cases33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

vitamins, folic acid, beta carotene and trace elements) are regulators of innate and adaptive intestinal immune homeostasis. An excessive and unhealthy consumption of sugar, animal fat and a low-vegetable and -fiber diet are risk factors for IBD appearance. Furthermore, metabolism of nutrients in intestinal epithelium and in gut microbiota is altered by inflammation, changing the demand for nutrients needed for homeostasis. This role of food and a reduced gut microbial diversity in causing IBD might also have a prophylactic or therapeutic role for IBD. The relationship between dietary intake, symptoms, and bowel inflammation could lead to dietary and lifestyle recommendations, including diets with abundant fruits, vegetables, olive oil and oily fish, which have anti-inflammatory effects and could prevent dysbiosis and IBD. Dietary modulation and appropriate exclusion diets might be a new complementary management for treatment at disease flares and in refractory patients, even reducing complications, hospitalizations and surgery, through modifying the luminal intestinal environment.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeImmune systemDysbiosisImmunologyInflammationGut floraIntestinal permeabilityMedicineBiologyInflammatory bowel diseasePhysiologyDiseaseBioinformaticsInternal medicineGut microbiota and healthChild Nutrition and Water AccessNutritional Studies and Diet
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