A 3-month study was conducted in flood victims from affected villages in the Tumpat district, Kelantan. Participants were given either probiotic, Bifidobacterium infantis M63 (M-63 group) or no probiotics (control group) for three months. At baseline and 3-month, participants were assessed for thewater, sanitation and hygiene (WaSH) practices, abdominal symptoms, breath testing for hydrogen and methane to detect the presence of SIBO and also fecal samples for gut microbiota profiling.
There is an observed rise in cases of acute gastroenteritis and post-infectious irritable bowel syndrome (PI-IBS) during the peak flood period. One major reason is poor sanitation, water and hygiene practice by flood victims during the flood because of poor access to clean water. The mechanism how poor hygiene causes non-specific abdominal complaints is unknown. The investigators speculated that small intestinal overgrowth (SIBO) is the fundamental basis for the increase in reported cases of acute gastroenteritis and abdominal complaints among flood victims. The investigators further speculated that administration of antibiotics or probiotics could reduce the abdominal symptoms after three months. Therefore, the intervention study was conducted for three months. Compliance of participants was checked by a diary given to participants in the M-63 group to document their daily intake of probiotics. This study will for the first time demonstrate the fundamental mechanism behind the poor WaSH practices and gastrointestinal disturbances after flood. Also this study would support a role for probiotic intervention to reduce abdominal complications when the next flood occurs.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
53
B. infantis M63 (2.5 x 109 cfu/g per sachet) was given to Probiotics M-63 group for three months.
No probiotic intervention was given to the control group for three months.
IBS Symptom Severity Scale (IBS-SSS) scores
IBS-SSS contains five questions that determine severity of abdominal pain, severity of abdominal distension, dissatisfaction with bowel habits and interference with quality of life (QOL) on a 100-point visual analogue scale. Since each question contributes to the score equally, therefore 500 is the maximum score, and higher the score, the severity is worse. For those participants with scores below 175, they have mild IBS, and in general, if scores are below 75, they are considered in remission. No units of measure are used.
Time frame: Three months
36-Item Short Form Survey (SF-36) scores
SF-36 measures four physical components (i.e. physical functioning, role limitations in physical health, bodily pain and general health perception) and four mental components (i.e. social functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, vitality or energy and mental well-being). Total physical component and total mental component were calculated as the sum of all items in the physical and mental components, respectively. Participants with a higher score in each domain of SF-36 have a better quality of life (QOL) in that domain. No units of measure are used.
Time frame: Three months
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) scores
The Malay-translated version of 14-item HADS contains four-point Likert responses Participants with higher scores had worse anxiety and depression. No units of measure are used.
Time frame: Three months
Breath-testing for small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO)
Participants were asked to exhale end-expiratory breath samples into a collection bag at baseline. Then they were asked to drink 75 g of glucose in cold water. At intervals of 15 mins for the next 2 hours, breath samples were collected and symptoms recorded. Forty mL of exhaled breath were syringed into the machine (Quintron, Milwaukee, US), and levels of H2 and CH4 (in parts per million or ppm) were determined. For a positive test, the following criteria were applied: a rise in H2 value (≥ 20 ppm) or CH4 values (≥ 10 ppm) above fasting baseline value or a sustained rise in H2 or CH4 of 5 ppm over 3 consecutive breath samples. A rise in breath values as above and reproduction of symptoms were required to diagnose SIBO.
Time frame: Three months
Changes in gut microbiota at the phylum level
Fresh fecal specimens were collected and gut microbial analysis was performed. Changes in gut microbiota at the phylum level were reported in terms of relative abundance.
Time frame: Three months
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