The inability to control bowel movements, or bowel leakage - known
as fecal incontinence - affects roughly 1 in 6 noninstitutionalized
elderly Americans, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
"It is quietly debilitating because of the stigma around the
condition," study leader Dr. Kyle Staller of Harvard Medical School
in Boston told Reuters Health by email. "Once affected, patients
have few treatment options."
Staller and colleagues examined the association between long-term
dietary fiber intake and fecal incontinence risk among more than
58,000 older women in the Nurses' Health Study. All of the women had
filled out food frequency questionnaires at regular intervals
between 1984 and 2006. As of 2008, none of them were incontinent.
By 2012, more than 7,000 were experiencing more than one fecal
incontinence episode per month.
When the researchers divided the women into five groups based on
their fiber intake over time, women with the highest intake - about
25 grams per day, on average - had a fecal incontinence risk that
was 18 percent lower than the risk for women in the group with the
lowest fiber intake.
Women with the highest intake of fiber also had a 31 percent lower
risk of diarrhea.
Whole grains and vegetables were the largest sources of dietary
fiber.
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The study can't prove that a specific amount of fiber intake will
prevent fecal incontinence. Still, the results are in alignment with
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommendation of 25
grams of dietary fiber per day.
The prevalence of fecal incontinence is expected to increase about
60 percent in older U.S. women by 2050, the researchers say.
"Many people do not know how prevalent it is and feel as if they are
the only ones with the problem," said Donna Bliss of the University
of Minnesota School of Nursing in Minneapolis, who wasn't involved
with this study.
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In an earlier study, Bliss and her colleagues found that a type of
fiber called psyllium was more effective than other fiber
supplements (such as gum arabic and carboxymethylcellulose) at
improving fecal incontinence.
"There is the idea among some people that fecal incontinence is an
inevitable consequence of aging," Bliss told Reuters Health by
email. "These findings suggest a way that people might prevent fecal
incontinence and feel more of a sense of control over their health."
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2KbJq0c Gastroenterology, online May 11, 2018.
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