Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Diet
Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Diet
If you have any of the following symptoms consult your doctor immediately:
unintentional and unexplained weight loss; rectal bleeding; a family history of bowel or ovarian cancer; if you
are over 60 years old, a change in bowel habit to looser and/or more frequent stools for more than 6 weeks.
Before attempting to manage symptoms via your diet, it is important to rule our other medical conditions, and
to have a diagnosis established by your doctor or healthcare professional.
Resistant starches
• These are the starches in foods that are not completely digested by the body. They enter the
bowel where they ferment and produce gas. Try reducing your intake of the following foods:
• pulses, whole grains, sweetcorn, green bananas and muesli that contains bran
• undercooked or reheated potato or maize/corn – instead eat them freshly cooked and still hot
• oven chips, crisps, potato waffles, fried rice – choose baked potatoes or boiled rice
• part-baked and reheated breads, such as garlic bread, pizza base – choose fresh breads
• processed food such as potato or pasta salad, or manufactured biscuits and cakes
• ready meals containing pasta or potato, such as lasagne, shepherd’s pie, macaroni cheese
• dried pasta – use fresh pasta instead.
For symptoms of diarrhoea
• Replace lost fluids by drinking plenty – at least 8 cups a day. Choose water or non-
caffeinated drinks – for example, herbal teas or sugar-free squash.
• Limit fizzy drinks.
• Try not to have alcohol every day and then have no more than 2 units a day.
• Restrict intake of caffeinated drinks (for example, tea, coffee or cola) to 3 cups a day.
• Limit insoluble fibre intake from wholegrain breads, bran, cereals, nuts and seeds (except
golden linseeds).
• Avoid skin, pips and pith from fruit and vegetables.
• Limit fresh and dried fruit to 3 portions a day and fruit juice to 1 small glass a day.*
*Remember to make up the recommended ‘5 a day’ with vegetables.
• Limit intake of foods high in resistant starches (see box overleaf).
• Avoid sugar-free sweets (such as mints and gum) and food products containing sorbitol.
• Live ‘probiotic’ yoghurts, supplements or fermented milk drinks: if you choose to try them you
will need to take them daily for at least one month at the dose recommended by the
manufacturer to see if they are likely to help. Monitor the effect on your symptoms. If a
product does not appear effective, you could consider another brand as the types of bacteria
used vary between products.
• Diarrhoea may also be caused by a high intake of fatty foods. Avoid foods high in fat,
such as chips, fast foods, burgers and sausages, crisps and cakes. Try low fat versions.
Golden linseeds
Can be added to foods such as breakfast cereal, yoghurts or soups. If necessary, take up to
1 tablespoon a day. Give your bowels a few days to adjust to the effect. Remember to wash
down the linseeds with plenty of non-caffeinated fluid, and to drink up to 8 cups of fluid a day.
Useful contacts: The Gut Trust. Helpline: 0114 272 3253 Website:www.theguttrust.org
BDA website: www.bda.uk.com NICE website: www.nice.org.uk
Authors: Liane Reeves and Miranda Lomer (2008).
Revision of: Bravin and Reeves (2007) Irritable bowel syndrome and diet, BDA, UK.