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Clinical Trial Summary

This randomized controlled trial aims to study how a high intake of a fibre-rich bread affects the composition and functioning of the gut microbiota in healthy subjects, and how this, in turn, impacts on the release of gut peptides, intestinal permeability, stress and cognitive performance.


Clinical Trial Description

Healthy subjects will be recruited for a 3-week, randomized, parallel-controlled study. Subjects that are eligible to take part in the study will be blinded and randomly allocated to consume a fibre-rich bread or a control bread daily for 3 weeks. Measurements of biomarkers related to the gut-brain axis, microbiota composition and functioning, intestinal permeability, stress and cognitive functioning will be conducted on two separate test days, at baseline and after the 3 weeks intervention. On both test days (day 0 and day 21) subjects will come to the study centre after a 10 hours overnight fast and will deliver faecal samples collected at home. At the study centre, blood samples will be collected and a device for continuous assessment of autonomic nervous system response (Biopac) will be placed. Subjects will drink a multisugar solution and urine samples will be collected for gut permeability analysis. Sugar solution intake will be followed by a baseline period during which participants will rest for 30 minutes to adapt to the laboratory setting. After the baseline period, subjects will conduct a stress test and cognitive tests. Visual analogue scales (VAS) to assess momentary perceived stress levels and saliva samples will be collected before and after the stress test. The study subjects will also complete questionnaires at both visits (food frequency questionnaire, food diary, physical activity, gastrointestinal symptom rating scale, Euro Quality of Life). ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06333717
Study type Interventional
Source Örebro University, Sweden
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date March 3, 2021
Completion date November 5, 2021

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