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- V Miller, R Lea, A Agrawal, and P J Whorwell.
- South Manchester University Hospitals, Manchester, UK.
- Dig Liver Dis. 2006 Oct 1; 38 (10): 737-40.
BackgroundWe have shown that bran exacerbates irritable bowel syndrome symptoms in a large proportion of secondary-care patients. However, it is unknown if this also happens in primary-care or whether a better response to bran occurs, leading to bran failures being selected for referral to the specialist.AimsTo assess the response to bran in primary-care irritable bowel syndrome comparing it to that obtained in secondary-care.Patients And MethodsOne hundred consecutive primary-care irritable bowel syndrome patients were asked how bran or soluble fibre products affected their symptoms.ResultsBran improved symptoms in 27% of primary-care and 10% of secondary-care patients (p<0.01) and exacerbated symptoms in 22% of primary-care and 55% of secondary-care patients (p<0.001). Fifty-one percent of primary-care and 33% of secondary-care patients reported no change with bran. In primary-care, proprietary fibre led to improvement in 25%, deterioration in 19% and no change in 56% which was not significantly different to secondary-care.ConclusionAlthough not especially effective in primary-care irritable bowel syndrome patients, bran does not cause so many problems and is more helpful than in secondary-care. The effects of soluble fibre are similar in both primary-care and secondary-care. This study highlights the problem of extrapolating the response to treatment in irritable bowel syndrome from different care settings.
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