Building bowel health: is there a place for whey?

Last night I had the priv­ilege of spend­ing my even­ing with the local Halton chapter of the Canadian Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation, and had a great exper­i­ence chat­ting about the health and patency of the bowel. For those of you who are avail­able and inter­ested in learn­ing more about the CCFC, an Education Symposium will be tak­ing place Saturday November 19th in Burlington, ON.

I always learn some­thing new about what patients read and are inter­ested in know­ing for their health, and last night was no excep­tion. A fab­ulous ques­tion was asked about the bene­fit of whey pro­tein and bowel health, and if there is a bene­fit to sup­port­ing the bowel and muscle build­ing both with exer­cise and in general.

What is whey protein?

Whey pro­tein, from dairy products (curds and whey, remem­ber Little Miss Muffett?), has been used in recent years for its abil­ity to sup­port the degrad­a­tion and build­ing of muscle. It has also in some stud­ies proven to improve the per­meab­il­ity of the bowel wall and assist in recon­struct­ing it when there is dam­age (this more import­ant for IBS or IBD (Crohn’s and ulcer­at­ive colitis) that this dam­age is often cyc­lical and long-​term in nature).

Whey pro­tein in lit­er­at­ure has also been known to sup­port the growth of spe­cific pro­bi­otic cul­tures (good bac­teria for the intest­ine that live there nor­mally), and strains such as Lactobacillus casei, GG, and rham­nosus are needed to sta­bil­ize immunity in the gastrointest­inal tract as well as sup­port the increased pro­duc­tion of healthy cells in the GI tract.

Are all whey pro­teins the same?

No, they are not. The whey pro­tein often used in pro­tein for­mu­las for body-​building while they may have the same amount of whey in a pro­tein capa­city can have addit­ives (sug­ars for sweet­en­ing, addi­tional chem­ic­als) that a sens­it­ive sys­tem does not eas­ily handle. Additionally, most of the whey in some of the com­mer­cial for­mu­las is of a bovine (cow’s) source, and unfor­tu­nately there is some evid­ence that IBS and IBD can be affected adversely by lactose intol­er­ance and the inab­il­ity to pro­cess cow’s dairy. This is incon­sist­ent how­ever in stud­ies, and fur­ther work needs to be done to decipher whether this is an excep­tion for cer­tain patients or it this is defin­it­ive. There are also goat’s whey which can be very help­ful for this pur­pose in the instances of cow’s source intolerances.

A recent sci­entific study com­bined both whey and an amino acid glutam­ine (the build­ing block for pro­teins in our body) for those suf­fer­ing with Crohn’s, and pre­lim­in­ary research sug­gests that the intest­inal wall was repaired with the addi­tion of these inter­ven­tions. Obviously fur­ther research is required, how­ever there is some prom­ise for whey in this instance. Whether this is applic­able for ulcer­at­ive colitis also remains to be seen, and if it can be repeated by other laboratories.

References

Benjamin J, Makharia G, Ahuja V, Anand Rajan KD, Kalaivani M, Gupta SD, Joshi YKGlutamine and Whey Protein Improve Intestinal Permeability and Morphology in Patients with Crohn’s Disease: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Dig Dis Sci. 2011 Oct 26. [Epub ahead of print]

About Dr Aoife

Dr Aoife Earls is a naturopathic doctor whose passion is in improving skin conditions and supporting gastrointestinal conditions like irritable bowel diseases and irritable bowel syndrome.
This entry was posted in Crohn's disease, Gastrointestinal, I.B.D., Ulcerative colitis and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

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