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Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: A Systematic Review.
Nutrients. 2021 Apr 14; 13(4)N

Abstract

Recent evidence showed that dietary habits play a role as risk factors for the development of diverticular complications. This systematic review aims to assess the effect of dietary habits in the prevention of diverticula complications (i.e., acute diverticulitis and diverticula bleeding) in patients with diverticula disease. PubMed and Scopus databases were searched up to 19 January 2021, 330 records were identified, and 8 articles met the eligibility criteria and were subjected to data extraction. The quality of the studies was evaluated by the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment form. No study meets the criteria for being a high-quality study. A high intake of fiber was associated to a decreased risk of diverticulitis or hospitalization due to diverticular disease, with a protective effect for fruits and cereal fiber, but not for vegetable fiber; whereas, a high red meat consumption and a generally Western dietary pattern were associated with an increased risk of diverticulitis. Alcohol use seemed to be associated to diverticular bleeding, but not to recurrent diverticulitis or diverticular complications. Further high-quality studies are needed to better define these associations. It is mandatory to ascertain the role of dietary habits for the development of recurrent acute diverticulitis and diverticular bleeding.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Medical-Surgical Department of Clinical Sciences and Translational Medicine, University Sapienza, 00189 Rome, Italy.Medical-Surgical Department of Clinical Sciences and Translational Medicine, University Sapienza, 00189 Rome, Italy.Gastroenterology and Endoscopy Unit, "Sant'Anna e San Sebastiano" Hospital Caserta, 81100 Caserta, Italy.Medical-Surgical Department of Clinical Sciences and Translational Medicine, University Sapienza, 00189 Rome, Italy.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Systematic Review

Language

eng

PubMed ID

33919755

Citation

Carabotti, Marilia, et al. "Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: a Systematic Review." Nutrients, vol. 13, no. 4, 2021.
Carabotti M, Falangone F, Cuomo R, et al. Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2021;13(4).
Carabotti, M., Falangone, F., Cuomo, R., & Annibale, B. (2021). Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 13(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13041288
Carabotti M, et al. Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: a Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2021 Apr 14;13(4) PubMed PMID: 33919755.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Role of Dietary Habits in the Prevention of Diverticular Disease Complications: A Systematic Review. AU - Carabotti,Marilia, AU - Falangone,Francesca, AU - Cuomo,Rosario, AU - Annibale,Bruno, Y1 - 2021/04/14/ PY - 2021/03/01/received PY - 2021/04/02/revised PY - 2021/04/12/accepted PY - 2021/4/30/entrez PY - 2021/5/1/pubmed PY - 2021/6/8/medline KW - alcohol drinking KW - coffee KW - colonic KW - diet KW - dietary fiber KW - diverticulitis KW - diverticulosis KW - meat JF - Nutrients JO - Nutrients VL - 13 IS - 4 N2 - Recent evidence showed that dietary habits play a role as risk factors for the development of diverticular complications. This systematic review aims to assess the effect of dietary habits in the prevention of diverticula complications (i.e., acute diverticulitis and diverticula bleeding) in patients with diverticula disease. PubMed and Scopus databases were searched up to 19 January 2021, 330 records were identified, and 8 articles met the eligibility criteria and were subjected to data extraction. The quality of the studies was evaluated by the Newcastle-Ottawa quality assessment form. No study meets the criteria for being a high-quality study. A high intake of fiber was associated to a decreased risk of diverticulitis or hospitalization due to diverticular disease, with a protective effect for fruits and cereal fiber, but not for vegetable fiber; whereas, a high red meat consumption and a generally Western dietary pattern were associated with an increased risk of diverticulitis. Alcohol use seemed to be associated to diverticular bleeding, but not to recurrent diverticulitis or diverticular complications. Further high-quality studies are needed to better define these associations. It is mandatory to ascertain the role of dietary habits for the development of recurrent acute diverticulitis and diverticular bleeding. SN - 2072-6643 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/33919755/full_citation DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -