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Low-fat/high-fibre diet prehabilitation improves anastomotic healing via the microbiome: an experimental model.

S K HyojuC AdriaansensK WienholtsA SharmaR KeskeyW ArnoldD van DalenN GottelN HymanA ZaborinJ GilbertH van GoorO ZaborinaJohn C Alverdy
Published in: The British journal of surgery (2019)
The adverse effects of chronic feeding of a WD on the microbiota and anastomotic healing can be prevented by a short course of SD in mice. Surgical relevance Worldwide, enhanced recovery programmes have developed into standards of care that reduce major complications after surgery, such as surgical-site infections and anastomotic leak. A complementary effort termed prehabilitation includes preoperative approaches such as smoking cessation, exercise and dietary modification. This study investigated whether a short course of dietary prehabilitation in the form of a low-fat/high-fibre composition can reverse the adverse effect of a high-fat Western-type diet on anastomotic healing in mice. Intake of a Western-type diet had a major adverse effect on both the intestinal microbiome and anastomotic healing following colonic anastomosis in mice. This could be reversed when mice received a low-fat/high-fibre diet before operation. Taken together, these data suggest that dietary modifications before major surgery can improve surgical outcomes via their effects on the intestinal microbiome.
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