AJCN Tufts Nutrition Symposium, Boston Sept 24-26
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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Vol 43, 210-212, Copyright © 1986 by The American Society for Clinical Nutrition, Inc


ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS

Increasing starch intake in the human diet increases fecal bulking

PS Shetty and AV Kurpad

Fecal bulking occurs through water holding by dietary residue as well as by enhanced bacterial mass as a result of bacterial utilization of dietary fiber. In this study, increasing the energy intake of human subjects by supplementing the carbohydrate content of the diet with corn starch increased fecal weights and fecal nitrogen content. This indicates that the carbohydrate content, more specifically the starch content, of the diet influences fecal bulking by possibly increasing available substrates for colonic bacterial proliferation which are dependent largely on undigested fiber in the colon. This may explain why high fecal weights occur in the tropics on comparable intakes of dietary fiber but on high starch intakes.


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D. L. Topping and P. M. Clifton
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Physiol Rev, July 1, 2001; 81(3): 1031 - 1064.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]


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M J A P Govers, N J Gannon, F R Dunshea, P R Gibson, and J G Muir
Wheat bran affects the site of fermentation of resistant starch and luminal indexes related to colon cancer risk: a study in pigs
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Copyright © 1986 by The American Society for Nutrition