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Rationale: constipation-related complaints are prevalent in 5-20% of the population.
Dietary fibers play a crucial role in improving and maintaining gut health, increasing stool weight, stool frequency and improvement of stool consistency. Currently, very few adults meet the recommendation of 30 (females) or 40 (males) grams of fiber per day. Personalized dietary advice may be the solution to increase dietary fiber intake and reduce constipation-related complaints in large populations. Objective: To investigate the effectiveness of personalized dietary advice (PDA) in reducing constipation-related complaints, by increasing dietary fiber intake in people with constipation-related complaints. Study design: This study has a one-group pre-test post-test design with a run-in period.
The duration of the study is 8 weeks, which includes a 4-week run-in phase and a 4-week intervention period. All subjects receive the PDA. Study population: adult subjects with constipation-related complaints, defined as predominant Bristol stool form between 1-4 and not satisfied with their bowel habits (scale ranging from 1-10, cut-off <6). Possibly stool frequency ≤4 stools per week will be included as a definition. Subjects need to have a relatively low dietary fiber intake defined as <26 grams (females) or <33 grams (males), which is ≥15% below the recommendation of fiber intake. Intervention: personalized advice based on their habitual food pattern (as assessed using a food frequency questionnaire) and preferences. Based on a special algorithm, the PDA provides high fiber alternatives for low-fiber products that subjects currently use, close to their current eating behavior, to help increase dietary fiber intake. This PDA will be provided using an online web-portal.
Main study parameters/endpoints:primary outcomes are stool pattern, gastrointestinal complaints and constipation quality of life and severity. Secondary parameters include dietary fiber intake, physical activity, body weight, psychological questionnaires, and fecal microbiota composition and metabolite levels. Furthermore, the PDA will be evaluated.
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Inclusion criteria
Age 18- 55 years
BMI <30 kg/m2
Has constipation related complaints: response <6 to the question "how satisfied are you with your stool pattern", which is rated on a visual analog scale (VAS) from 1-10, together with at least one of the following criteria:
living in the surroundings of wageningen (max. 50km)
in possession of a computer with chrome browser and a mobile phone compatible with applications Note: these criteria are less stringent than the official "constipation" definition, because we preferably want to include participants that do not use laxatives (yet), and we assume that in this 'mild constipation' group increasing fiber intake can have the most beneficial effects. Moreover, we chose not to use the Rome IV criteria as definition of constipation-related complaints, due to the proven inability to distinguish functional constipation from Irritable Bowel Syndrome. If there are sufficient eligible participants, the participants with the lowest stool frequency will be selected
Relatively low fiber intake (females <26 grams, males <33 grams). When enough eligible participants are available, we will choose the participants with the lowest dietary fiber intake.
signed informed consent
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29 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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