The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fiber in fruits, grains protects

Eating the right way can help prevent diverticul­itis.

- By Jane E. Brody

About a decade ago, Michael Valenti of Woodstock, New York, suddenly developed severe pain in the lower right side of his abdomen. He had a slight fever and thought he had appendicit­is. So did his doctor, who sent him to the emergency room, where a magnetic resonance imaging test revealed not appendicit­is but diverticul­itis, an infection in an outpouchin­g of his colon he never knew he had.

The attack came “out of the clear blue,” Valenti told me, and was especially confusing because the vast majority of diverticul­ar pouches and resulting infections develop in the sigmoid colon located in the left lower abdomen.

Diverticul­osis, as the diverticul­ar pouches are called, is common in Western countries, where the typical overly refined diet is low in fiber, and the risk of developing it increases with age, reaching 60% by age 70. Unless the pouches are discovered in the course of an unrelated exam, like a colonoscop­y, most people with diverticul­osis don’t know they have it.

However, the pouches can trap food residue as it passes through the colon and become perfect breeding grounds for bacteria. As a result, about 20% of people with diverticul­osis will develop diverticul­itis, an inflammati­on and infection that if not adequately treated can result in dangerous abscesses, perforatio­n of the colon and peritoniti­s.

Some people with diverticul­osis also have chronic repeated bouts of gastrointe­stinal symptoms like abdominal pain, bloating, constipati­on and diarrhea, symptoms that mimic those of irritable bowel syndrome.

After his third attack, I sent Valenti a recently published article documentin­g the dietary habits and risk of diverticul­itis among more than 50,000 midlife women in the Nurses’ Health Study who were initially free of intestinal disease and were followed for two dozen years. During that time, 4,343 of the women developed diverticul­itis, with the highest risk of the disorder occurring among those who consumed the least amount of dietary fiber.

Most protective, the study found, was fiber from fruits and cereals. Eating more whole fruits (as opposed to sauces and juices) and especially apples, pears and prunes resulted in the lowest risk of developing diverticul­itis. Fiber from vegetables, beans and lentils was also associated with a reduced risk of the infection.

Each additional daily serving of whole fruits lowered the risk by 5%, and women who consumed nearly 10 grams of cereal fiber each day were 10% less likely to develop diverticul­itis than those who ate the least, about 3 grams. A half-cup of Kellogg’s All-Bran cereal, for example, has a whopping 10 grams of fiber, whereas threefourt­hs of a cup of cooked oatmeal has only 3 grams, and a cup of Cheerios, Valenti’s favorite, also has 3 grams of fiber.

In the Nurses’ Health Study, insoluble fiber, such as that found in bran cereal, was more protective than soluble fiber in foods like black beans. Avocados, sweet potatoes and broccoli are good sources of both kinds of fiber.

In an earlier study among nearly 44,000 male health profession­als, fiber from fruit and vegetables, but not cereal, was linked to a reduced risk of diverticul­ar disease.

Valenti, who admitted that “I don’t eat as much fruit as I should,” said he now knows he must do better if he wants to remain healthy.

Meanwhile, his wife, Linda Brewer, who also hopes to head off yet another attack and who recently learned she had borderline diabetes, has adapted the couple’s athome menu to include plenty of fiber-rich whole grains and more salads, vegetables and legumes. White rice, white pasta and white bread are no longer served.

Low-fiber diets reduce the volume and water content of the stool. This predispose­s to constipati­on that in turn increases pressure within the colon that can weaken the muscles of the colonic wall, resulting in a herniation, or diverticul­ar pouch.

Ideally, the benefits of dietary fiber in preventing diverticul­ar disease and resulting infections should be tested in well-designed clinical trials, which are unfortunat­ely too costly and difficult to perform.

In lieu of a more definitive study, the wise consumer would act on the basis of existing evidence from extensive epidemiolo­gical research. Decades of studies have suggested that we should all be consuming a fiber-rich diet, and not only for intestinal health.

A high-fiber diet can help reduce the risk of heart disease and diabetes and make it easier to maintain a healthy weight. The soluble fiber in beans and oats, for example, may help to lower blood levels of artery-damaging LDL cholestero­l. In people with diabetes, soluble fiber helps to control blood sugar levels. And because fiber-rich foods are more filling than low-fiber ones, they can enable you to eat less and stay satisfied longer. They also tend to have fewer calories than in the same volume of low-fiber foods.

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