Nutrients, Vol. 17, Pages 559: Nutritional Habits in Crohn’s Disease Onset and Management

Nutrients, Vol. 17, Pages 559: Nutritional Habits in Crohn’s Disease Onset and Management

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu17030559

Authors:
Konstantinos Papadimitriou
Georgia-Eirini Deligiannidou
Gavriela Voulgaridou
Constantinos Giaginis
Sousana K. Papadopoulou

Crohn’s disease (CD)’s activation factors are still unclear. However, they are reported to involve an interaction between genetic susceptibility and unhealthy lifestyle factors like smoking, alcohol consumption, low physical activity, low BMI (<18.5 kg/m2), and probably unbalanced nutritional habits. Therefore, the aim of the present narrative review is to demonstrate the possible effects of different nutritional habits, before the occurrence of the disease, as crucial factors for the inception of CD activation. The structure of the present narrative review was conducted following the instructions of the “Narrative Review Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Checklist”. It is well established that the consumption of specific foods and drinks, such as spicy and fatty foods, raw vegetables and fruits, dairy products, carbonated beverages, and coffee or tea, can provoke the exacerbation of CD symptoms. On the other hand, Mediterranean-oriented diets seem to provide an inverse association with the incidence of CD. Moreover, patients seem to have the knowledge to select foods that contribute to the remission of their symptoms. However, it is not clearly reported whether the inception of CD activation is due to lifelong unbalanced nutritional habits and their subsequent effect on gut microbiota secretion, which seems to be the gold standard for CD’s investigation. Therefore, more future studies should record, examine, and compare the nutritional habits between patients with CD (immediately after the disease’s diagnosis) and healthy populations in a lifelong manner, in order to reveal the possible influence of foods on CD inception.

​Crohn’s disease (CD)’s activation factors are still unclear. However, they are reported to involve an interaction between genetic susceptibility and unhealthy lifestyle factors like smoking, alcohol consumption, low physical activity, low BMI (<18.5 kg/m2), and probably unbalanced nutritional habits. Therefore, the aim of the present narrative review is to demonstrate the possible effects of different nutritional habits, before the occurrence of the disease, as crucial factors for the inception of CD activation. The structure of the present narrative review was conducted following the instructions of the “Narrative Review Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Checklist”. It is well established that the consumption of specific foods and drinks, such as spicy and fatty foods, raw vegetables and fruits, dairy products, carbonated beverages, and coffee or tea, can provoke the exacerbation of CD symptoms. On the other hand, Mediterranean-oriented diets seem to provide an inverse association with the incidence of CD. Moreover, patients seem to have the knowledge to select foods that contribute to the remission of their symptoms. However, it is not clearly reported whether the inception of CD activation is due to lifelong unbalanced nutritional habits and their subsequent effect on gut microbiota secretion, which seems to be the gold standard for CD’s investigation. Therefore, more future studies should record, examine, and compare the nutritional habits between patients with CD (immediately after the disease’s diagnosis) and healthy populations in a lifelong manner, in order to reveal the possible influence of foods on CD inception. Read More

Full text for top nursing and allied health literature.

X