Ingestion of water-soluble soybean fiber prevents gastrectomy-induced iron malabsorption, anemia and impairment of voluntary running exercise performance in rats.

2003 
We examined the effects of feeding water-soluble soybean fiber (WSSF), a highly fermentable dietary fiber, on gastrectomy-induced iron malabsorption, anemia and impairment of exercise performance in rats in two separate experiments. The study was designed as a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement with operation (total gastrectomy) and diet (WSSF) under sedentary (Experiment 1) and exercised (Experiment 2) conditions. In Experiment 1, gastrectomy reduced net iron absorption, hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit and hemoglobin regeneration efficiency (P < 0.01). However, in rats fed a WSSF diet (50 g/kg diet), iron absorption and the hematological variables of the gastrectomized rats were comparable to those in the sham-operated rats, demonstrating that ingestion of WSSF promotes iron absorption and prevents anemia after gastrectomy. Feeding WSSF increased pools of organic acids and soluble iron in cecal contents and decreased the pH of the cecal contents (P < 0.001). Of the many cecal variables measured, net iron absorption in gastrectomized rats was most closely correlated (r = 0.614, P < 0.01) with the short-chain fatty acid pool in the cecum. Cecal fermentation of WSSF may contribute to improvements in gastrectomy-induced nutritional defects. In Experiment 2, we examined voluntary running exercise performance in totally gastrectomized rats fed diets with or without WSSF. Total gastrectomy severely impaired running performance (P < 0.001), and WSSF feeding largely restored the lowered performance. We conclude that feeding WSSF improves anemia and impaired voluntary running performance in totally gastrectomized rats.
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