Relationship Between the Frequency of Bowel Movements and Fecal Bacteroides in Japanese Women
The intestinal microbiota is involved in many diseases, such as constipation, obesity, and inflammatory bowel disease. To determine the associations between the gut microbiome and the frequency of bowel movements, we performed cross-sectional correlation analysis at the baseline and longitudinal cor...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Plant foods for human nutrition (Dordrecht) 2024-06, Vol.79 (2), p.345-350 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The intestinal microbiota is involved in many diseases, such as constipation, obesity, and inflammatory bowel disease. To determine the associations between the gut microbiome and the frequency of bowel movements, we performed cross-sectional correlation analysis at the baseline and longitudinal correlation analysis after the intervention. Forty-three women were enrolled in this study. All participants ingested soymilk-okara powder (15 g) daily for 12 weeks. They recorded the ingested okara powder amounts and their frequency of bowel movements during the entire 12 weeks of the intervention. The fecal microbiota percentages were measured at baseline and after 12 weeks of intervention. Two women who did not completely record the frequency of bowel movements were excluded. In the cross-sectional correlation analysis at the baseline, there was a significant positive correlation between the relative abundance of the
Bacteroides
genus in the feces and the frequency of bowel movements per week (R = 0.429,
p
= 0.005) and a significant negative correlation between the relative abundance of
Clostridium cluster XI
in the feces and the frequency of bowel movements per week (R = −0.315,
p
= 0.045). Moreover, in the longitudinal correlation analysis, the difference in the relative abundance of
Bacteroides
genus in feces between the baseline and after the intervention significantly correlated with the changes in the frequency of bowel movements per week (R = 0.492,
p
= 0.001). Therefore, it was suggested that there was a relationship between the gut relative abundance of the
Bacteroides
genus and the frequency of bowel movements. |
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ISSN: | 0921-9668 1573-9104 1573-9104 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11130-024-01168-9 |