Monday Poster Session
Category: Colon

Muhammad YN Chaudhary, MBChB
Indiana University Southwest Internal Medicine Residency Program
Evansville, IN
We reviewed 24 studies (including 8 RCTs) involving ~1,700 IBS patients. Most showed that the low-FODMAP diet led to greater symptom relief than standard IBS diets. Between 50–75% of patients on a low-FODMAP diet experienced significant improvement, compared to 33–66% on other diets. One RCT reported 57% improvement with the low-FODMAP diet vs. 20% in the control group. The diet consistently reduced abdominal pain, bloating, and improved quality of life. However, long-term restriction may reduce beneficial gut bacteria like Bifidobacteria, so supervised reintroduction is essential. No serious adverse effects were noted. Overall, evidence quality was moderate, but findings across diverse populations support its benefit.