Issue 18, 2022

Chewing differences in consumers affect the digestion and colonic fermentation outcomes: in vitro studies

Abstract

It is important to understand variability in consumer chewing behavior for designing food products that deliver desired functionalities for target consumer segments. In this study, we selected 29 participants, representing the large range of chewing variation we had observed in 142 healthy young adults, and investigated the influence of chewing behavior on gastrointestinal digestion and colonic fermentation, using in vitro models and brown rice as a model food. Chewing behavior measured by video observations and chewing outcome differed widely between participants, resulting in large differences in the digestibility of carbohydrates. Inter-individual differences in chewing behavior and chewing outcome also significantly affected in vitro patterns of microbial composition and the production of organic acid metabolites, resulting from colonic fermentation, which is increasingly recognized to be important for human health. These digestion/fermentation outcomes were largely related with the chewing time per mouthful, proportion of bolus particles bigger than 2 mm and amount of saliva added to the bolus during chewing. No significant relationships were found with other chewing trajectory and oral physiological measures. These results suggest that modification of chewing may be an effective strategy to control blood glucose levels and to shape gut microbiota and their metabolites, without altering diets, and that further in vivo studies are warranted to confirm these in vitro findings.

Graphical abstract: Chewing differences in consumers affect the digestion and colonic fermentation outcomes: in vitro studies

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
23 Dec 2021
Accepted
19 Jun 2022
First published
20 Jun 2022

Food Funct., 2022,13, 9355-9371

Chewing differences in consumers affect the digestion and colonic fermentation outcomes: in vitro studies

E. H.-J. Kim, A. J. Wilson, L. Motoi, S. Mishra, J. Monro, S. G. Parkar, D. Rosendale, H. M. Stoklosinski, C. M. H. Jobsis, Y. Wadamori, D. I. Hedderley and M. P. Morgenstern, Food Funct., 2022, 13, 9355 DOI: 10.1039/D1FO04364A

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