• Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Get the latest Health and Fitness News on
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Your Fitness News Today
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Skincare
  • Weight Loss
  • Workout
  • Nutrition
  • Yoga
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Skincare
  • Weight Loss
  • Workout
  • Nutrition
  • Yoga
No Result
View All Result
Your Fitness News Today
No Result
View All Result

Fiber or Low FODMAP for SIBO? 

September 16, 2025
in Nutrition
58 4
0
Home Nutrition
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


It may not be the number of bacteria growing in our small intestine, but the type of bacteria, which can be corrected with diet.

When researchers tested more than a thousand patients suffering for longer than six months from symptoms typical with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), such as excess gas, bloating, diarrhea, and abdominal pain, but who do not appear to have anything more serious going on, like inflammatory bowel disease, a significant percentage were found to be suffering from lactose intolerance—intolerance to the milk sugar lactose. In infancy, we have an enzyme called lactase in our small intestine that digests milk sugar, but, understandably, most of us lose it after weaning. “Although genetic mutation has led to persistence of lactase in adults, about 75% of the world’s population malabsorbs lactose after age 30” and have lactose intolerance. However, a third of the patients were diagnosed with small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO).

“The evidence for SIBO and IBS is shrouded in controversy, predominantly because of the fact that the [breath] tests used in clinical practice to diagnose SIBO are not valid,” as I’ve explored before. As well, the implications of having more versus fewer bacteria growing in the small intestine are unclear since the number doesn’t seem to correlate with the symptoms. It turns out it isn’t the number of bugs growing in the small intestine, but the type of bugs. So, it’s “small intestinal microbial dysbiosis”—not overgrowth in general, but the wrong kind of growth—that appears to underlie symptoms associated with functional gastrointestinal disorders, like IBS.

How can we prevent this from happening? The symptoms appear to be correlated with a significant drop in the number of Prevotella. Remember them? Prevotella are healthy fiber feeders, “suggestive of a higher fiber intake in healthy individuals,” while the bugs found more in symptomatic patients ate sugar, which “may reflect a higher dietary intake of simple sugars.” However, correlation doesn’t mean causation. To prove cause and effect, we have to put it to the test, which is exactly what researchers did.

“Switching a group of healthy individuals who habitually ate a high­-fibre diet (>11g per 1,000 calories) to a low­-fibre diet (<10g per day) containing a high concentration of simple sugars for 7 days produced striking results. First, 80% developed de novo [new] gastrointestinal symptoms such as bloating and abdominal pain that resolved on resumption of their habitual high-fibre diet. Second, diet­-related changes in the small intestinal microbiome were predictive of symptoms (such as bloating and abdominal discomfort) and linked to an alteration in duodenal [intestinal] permeability.” In other words, they developed a leaky gut within seven days. And, while some went from SIBO positive to SIBO negative and others from SIBO negative to SIBO positive, it didn’t matter because the number of bacteria growing didn’t correlate with symptoms. It was the type of bacteria growing, as you can see below, and at 3:12 in my video Fiber vs. Low FODMAP for SIBO Symptoms.

No wonder their guts got leaky. Levels of short-chain fatty acids plummeted. Those are the magical by-products our good gut bugs make from fiber, which “play an important role in epithelial [intestinal] barrier integrity,” meaning they keep our gut from getting leaky.

So, while we don’t have sound data to suggest that something like a low FODMAP diet has any benefit for patients with SIBO symptoms, there have been more than a dozen randomized controlled trials that have put fiber to the test. Overall, researchers found there was a significant improvement in symptoms among those randomized to increase their fiber intake. That may help explain why “high-fiber, plant-based diets can prevent many diseases common in industrialized societies.” Such diets have this effect “on the composition and metabolic activity of the colonic microbiota.” Our good gut bugs take plant residues like fiber and produce “health-promoting and cancer-suppressing metabolites” like short-chain fatty acids, which have profound anti-inflammatory properties. “All the evidence points to a physiological need for ~50 g fiber per day, which is the amount contained in the traditional African diet and associated with the prevention of westernized diseases.” That is approximately twice the typical recommendation and three times more than what most people get on a daily basis. Perhaps it should be no surprise that we need so much. Even though we split from chimpanzees millions of years ago, “there is still broad congruency” in the composition of our respective microbiomes to this day. While they’re still eating their 98 to 99 percent plant-based diets to feed their friendly flora with fiber, we’ve largely removed fiber-rich foods from our food supply. 





Source link

You might also like

Magnesium Isn’t a Trend, It’s a Foundational Mineral: Here’s Why

Can It Lower Your Cancer Risk?

What Does Personalized Nutrition Actually Deliver?

Share30Tweet19

Recommended For You

Magnesium Isn’t a Trend, It’s a Foundational Mineral: Here’s Why

by Your Fitness News Today Staff
March 6, 2026
0
Magnesium Isn’t a Trend, It’s a Foundational Mineral: Here’s Why

Magnesium is everywhere right now. It’s on TikTok for muscle recovery.In your group chat for stress.On your nightstand for sleep.  But magnesium isn’t just a trend. It’s a...

Read more

Can It Lower Your Cancer Risk?

by Your Fitness News Today Staff
March 5, 2026
0
Can It Lower Your Cancer Risk?

Does choosing organic over conventional foods protect against cancer? What are the effects of pesticides on cancer risk? In a review updating the evidence on human exposure and...

Read more

What Does Personalized Nutrition Actually Deliver?

by Your Fitness News Today Staff
March 3, 2026
0
What Does Personalized Nutrition Actually Deliver?

There’s a lot of focus on personalized nutrition, but maybe we should focus on taking personal responsibility for our health. “Personalized nutrition (PN) is rooted in the concept...

Read more

Is the Longevity Movement Headed for a Backlash?

by Your Fitness News Today Staff
February 28, 2026
0
Is the Longevity Movement Headed for a Backlash?

Somewhere along the way, longevity stopped being about living well and started being about living perfectly. What began as a movement grounded in prevention has ballooned into biohacking...

Read more

The Link Between Milk and Parkinson’s Disease

by Your Fitness News Today Staff
February 26, 2026
0
The Link Between Milk and Parkinson’s Disease

Is the brain damage associated with milk consumption due to the banned pesticide heptachlor or the milk sugar galactose? Parkinson’s disease is a neurodegenerative brain disorder that affects...

Read more
Next Post
The genetic link behind sleep problems, cognitive dysfunction, and neuroticism in ‘treatment-resistant depression’

The genetic link behind sleep problems, cognitive dysfunction, and neuroticism in 'treatment-resistant depression'

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Nutrition
  • Skincare
  • Weight Loss
  • Workout
  • Yoga

Recent Posts

  • 5 ways to level up your bodyweight workout 🙌
  • Magnesium Isn’t a Trend, It’s a Foundational Mineral: Here’s Why
  • 3.6 Friday Faves – The Fitnessista
  • Stop Blaming Willpower – Your Body Is Actually Starving
  • Measuring paranoid beliefs: can adaptive testing support routine clinical care?

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
RSS Facebook

CATEGORIES:

Your Fitness News Today

Get the latest Health and Fitness News on YourFitnessNewsToday.com.

Wellbeing tips, weight Loss, workouts, and more...

SITE MAP

  • Contact us
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2024 Your Fitness News Today.
Your Fitness News Today is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Fitness
  • Mental Health
  • Skincare
  • Weight Loss
  • Workout
  • Nutrition
  • Yoga

Copyright © 2024 Your Fitness News Today.
Your Fitness News Today is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In