Vitamin D status in irritable bowel syndrome and the impact of supplementation on symptoms: what do we know and what do we need to know?

Authored by nature.com and submitted by Garrison_Forrdd

Low vitamin D status is associated with risk of colorectal cancer and has been implicated in inflammatory bowel disease. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic, relapsing, functional bowel disorder. A nascent literature suggests a role for vitamin D in IBS, but this has not been collated or critiqued. To date, seven studies have been published: four observational studies and three randomised controlled trials (RCTs). All observational studies reported that a substantial proportion of the IBS population was vitamin D deficient. Two intervention studies reported improvement in IBS symptom severity scores and quality of life (QoL) with vitamin D supplementation.

There are limited data around the role of vitamin D in IBS.

The available evidence suggests that low vitamin D status is common among the IBS population and merits assessment and rectification for general health reasons alone. An inverse correlation between serum vitamin D and IBS symptom severity is suggested and vitamin D interventions may benefit symptoms. However, the available RCTs do not provide strong, generalisable evidence; larger and adequately powered interventions are needed to establish a case for therapeutic application of vitamin D in IBS.

el_derrotado on January 26th, 2018 at 03:43 UTC »

Can confirm. I can shit through a screen door on a good day and my doc just put me on Vitamin D for the next 12 weeks (after labs). I can't wait to take the damn things, I'm only 31 and 50+ guys are running circles around me because I feel like I have no energy. It's like I haven't eaten in 3 days, except I have cause I spray like a breached whale.

UnfitWeakfish on January 26th, 2018 at 02:23 UTC »

I’ve been dealing with IBS for a few years now, but my symptoms have only recently started to improve. I attributed it to eating differently, but I have also been taking extra vitamin D supplements because my levels were very low. Interesting to think about.

Bfromtheblock on January 26th, 2018 at 00:50 UTC »

Hmm interesting my ibs gets worse in November and better in the spring.