AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the effects of diets based on soft and crisp wheat and rye breads with similar dietary fiber content but different fiber types on gastrointestinal and physiological functions in pigs.
  • The research focused on nutrient breakdown, fecal output, nutrient absorption, and insulin response, using pigs as models for human digestion.
  • Results indicated that the rye diet led to better nutrient degradation, higher moisture in feces, and increased butyrate production compared to the wheat diet, suggesting rye's fiber is more beneficial for gut health.

Article Abstract

The present investigation was undertaken to study the gastrointestinal and physiologic properties of diets based on soft and crisp wheat and rye breads similar in dietary fiber (DF; 230-235 g/kg dry matter) but with different proportions of the main DF polymers: in wheat, cellulose, and in rye, arabinoxylans (AX). The 2 diets provided all macronutrients; consequently, they had lower fat and sugar contents and a higher DF content than human mixed diets. The nutritional properties were studied in experiments in which pigs with cannulated ilea and catheterized portal veins and mesenteric arteries served as models for humans. The characteristics studied were degradation of nutrients, flow at the ileum, fecal output, absorption of nutrients deriving from the assimilation of cereal carbohydrates, and the insulin response. Apparent viscosity at the terminal small intestine, the ileal flow of water, flow and digestibility of noncarbohydrate constituents, but not of carbohydrates at the terminal ileum or the plasma concentrations of glucose and insulin, were higher when pigs consumed the rye compared with the wheat diet. The 2 diets provided approximately equal amounts of carbohydrates available for fermentation in the large intestine but because AX from the rye diet was more degradable than cellulose from the wheat diet, the quantitative degradation in the large intestine was more than twice as high when pigs consumed the former compared with the latter diet. The consequences included moister feces and significantly enhanced gut production and plasma concentrations of butyrate when pigs consumed the rye diet compared with the wheat diet.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/135.7.1696DOI Listing

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