JOURNAL ARTICLE

Jerusalem artichoke and chicory inulin in bakery products affect faecal microbiota of healthy volunteers

Brigitta KleessenSandra SchwarzAnke BoehmHerbert FuhrmannA. RichterThomas HenleMonika Krueger

Year: 2007 Journal:   British Journal Of Nutrition Vol: 98 (3)Pages: 540-549   Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Abstract

A study was conducted to test the effects of Jerusalem artichoke inulin (JA) or chicory inulin (CH) in snack bars on composition of faecal microbiota, concentration of faecal SCFA, bowel habit and gastrointestinal symptoms. Forty-five volunteers participated in a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group study. At the end of a 7 d run-in period, subjects were randomly assigned to three groups of fifteen subjects each, consuming either snack bars with CH or JA, or snack bars without fructans (placebo); for 7 d (adaptation period), they ingested one snack bar per day (7·7 g fructan/d) and continued for 14 d with two snack bars per day. The composition of the microbiota was monitored weekly. The consumption of CH or JA increased counts of bifidobacteria (+1·2 log 10 in 21 d) and reduced Bacteroides/Prevotella in number and the Clostridium histolyticum/C. lituseburense group in frequency at the end of intervention ( P < 0·05). No changes in concentration of faecal SCFA were observed. Consumption of snack bars resulted in a slight increase in stool frequency. Stool consistency was slightly affected in subjects consuming two snack bars containing CH or JA per day ( P < 0·05). Consumption of CH or JA resulted in mild and sometimes moderate flatulence in a few subjects compared to placebo ( P < 0·05). No structural differences were detected between CH and JA before and after processing. In conclusion, adaptation on increased doses of CH or JA in bakery products stimulates the growth of bifidobacteria and may contribute to the suppression of potential pathogenic bacteria.

Keywords:
Inulin Flatulence Placebo Prebiotic Food science Probiotic Fructan Bacteroides Defecation Feces Medicine Animal science Biology Internal medicine Microbiology Sucrose Bacteria

Metrics

172
Cited By
4.79
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
41
Refs
0.93
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Microbial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
Health Sciences →  Nursing →  Nutrition and Dietetics
Digestive system and related health
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Genetics
Food composition and properties
Health Sciences →  Nursing →  Nutrition and Dietetics

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