Background and AimPatients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) are at a risk of nutritional deficits because of poor dietary beliefs and practices. There are no data on this aspect from Asia, which is experiencing a rise in IBD incidence. We aimed to establish dietary beliefs and practices in patients of IBD from India.MethodsPatients with ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD) followed up between November 2016 and March 2017 were included. A questionnaire extracted information on the patients' sociodemographic, nutritional and disease profile, smoking and drinking habits, dietary beliefs and practices, current dietary preferences, intake and avoidance, dietary changes made after diagnosis of IBD, dietary changes made during relapse, frequency of consumption of major food groups, and the attitudes toward dietary advice.ResultsA total of 316 patients (218 UC and 98 CD; mean age: 38.5 ± 12.2 years) were included. Forty‐four percent patients perceived food as a risk factor for IBD, 52% felt dietary habits to have a more important role than medicines in disease control, 77% reported certain foods improve symptoms during relapse, 86% had modified their diet since the diagnosis of IBD (UC > CD, P = 0.04), 90% imposed food restrictions, and <50% had received dietary counseling. About 40% of patients could not meet their dietary requirements and 66% had decreased their dietary intake since diagnosis, which further decreased during relapse (85%).ConclusionDietary beliefs and practices play a central role in perception of disease in IBD patients. A large majority of them make dietary changes which can lead to undernutrition. Proper dietary counseling is required in these patients to prevent malnutrition.
Background and Aim
The literature on medication adherence in patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is heterogeneous. The present study aimed to identify the rates and predictors of nonadherence to medications in IBD.
Methods
This cross‐sectional study included patients of IBD (ulcerative colitis [UC] and Crohn's disease [CD]) recruited between November 2016 and March 2017. Adherence was assessed with a questionnaire (interview based) that evaluated patients' sociodemographic and disease profile and rates and predictors of medication adherence.
Results
A total of 266 patients (204 UC, 62 CD) were included (mean age: 38.5 ± 12.7 years, males: 142 [53.4%], mean disease duration: 6.4 ± 5.2 years). The overall adherence rate was 82.3%, with the lowest for topical therapy (67.3%) and the highest for steroids (95.9%). Predominant reasons for nonadherence were forgetting dose (18.8%), unavailability of medications (13.2%), felt better (11.7%), adverse effects (6.8%), and cost of treatment (6.0%). Patients' education (
P
< 0.001), occupation (
P
= 0.097), and socioeconomic status (
P
= 0.021) had a negative association with adherence. Patients in upper socioeconomic strata with professional education/occupation were the least adherent (47%), whereas patients from lower socioeconomic strata who were illiterate and unemployed had the highest adherence (100%).
Conclusion
More than 80% of patients were adherent to their medications; adherence was the lowest for topical therapy. Higher education, occupation, and upper socioeconomic status were negatively associated with adherence.
Chronic bloating and abdominal distension are common and highly bothersome gastrointestinal symptoms. Although the differential diagnoses for bloating and distension are broad, these symptoms are frequently associated with disorders of the gut-brain interaction. Functional abdominal bloating may be a result of visceral hypersensitivity, whereas abdominal distension seems to be a somatic behavioral response associated with abdominophrenic dyssynergia, featuring diaphragmatic contraction and abdominal wall relaxation. We review the available literature regarding abdominophrenic dyssynergia and comment on its epidemiology, diagnosis, treatment, and avenues to address in the near future.
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