Author:
Sood Ajit,Ahuja Vineet,Kedia Saurabh,Midha Vandana,Mahajan Ramit,Mehta Varun,Sudhakar Ritu,Singh Arshdeep,Kumar Ajay,Puri Amarender Singh,Tantry Bailuru Vishwanath,Thapa Babu Ram,Goswami Bhabhadev,Behera Banchha Nidhi,Ye Byong Duk,Bansal Deepak,Desai Devendra,Pai Ganesh,Yattoo Ghulam Nabi,Makharia Govind,Wijewantha Hasitha Srimal,Venkataraman Jayanthi,Shenoy K. T.,Dwivedi Manisha,Sahu Manoj Kumar,Bajaj Meenakshi,Abdullah Murdani,Singh Namrata,Singh Neelanjana,Abraham Philip,Khosla Rajiv,Tandon Rakesh,Misra S. P.,Nijhawan Sandeep,Sinha Saroj Kant,Bopana Sawan,Krishnaswamy Sheela,Joshi Shilpa,Singh Shivram Prasad,Bhatia Shobna,Gupta Sudhir,Bhatia Sumit,Ghoshal Uday Chand
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
These Asian Working Group guidelines on diet in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) present a multidisciplinary focus on clinical nutrition in IBD in Asian countries.
Methodology
The guidelines are based on evidence from existing published literature; however, if objective data were lacking or inconclusive, expert opinion was considered. The conclusions and 38 recommendations have been subject to full peer review and a Delphi process in which uniformly positive responses (agree or strongly agree) were required.
Results
Diet has an important role in IBD pathogenesis, and an increase in the incidence of IBD in Asian countries has paralleled changes in the dietary patterns. The present consensus endeavors to address the following topics in relation to IBD: (i) role of diet in the pathogenesis; (ii) diet as a therapy; (iii) malnutrition and nutritional assessment of the patients; (iv) dietary recommendations; (v) nutritional rehabilitation; and (vi) nutrition in special situations like surgery, pregnancy, and lactation.
Conclusions
Available objective data to guide nutritional support and primary nutritional therapy in IBD are presented as 38 recommendations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC