Authors :
Anjali Singh; Dr. Nirmala Singh
Volume/Issue :
Volume 10 - 2025, Issue 10 - October
Google Scholar :
https://tinyurl.com/mryn6k2f
Scribd :
https://tinyurl.com/5dez3kjv
DOI :
https://doi.org/10.38124/ijisrt/25oct1058
Note : A published paper may take 4-5 working days from the publication date to appear in PlumX Metrics, Semantic Scholar, and ResearchGate.
Note : Google Scholar may take 30 to 40 days to display the article.
Abstract :
Background
Gastrointestinal (GI) problems—particularly constipation—are common in older adults and lead to reduced quality of life,
polypharmacy (laxative use), and increased healthcare utilization. Dietary fiber is widely recommended to improve bowel
function and overall GI health, but the strength and specificity of evidence for elderly males remains unclear.
Objective
To systematically review randomized controlled trials (RCTs), observational studies, and existing systematic reviews/meta-
analyses assessing the effects of dietary fiber (food-based and supplemental) on GI outcomes in older men (≥60 years), and to
identify gaps and practical recommendations.
Methods
Electronic searches of PubMed/Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library and clinical-trial registries were performed (through
2025). Eligible studies included RCTs, cohort studies, and systematic reviews that reported GI outcomes (stool frequency, stool
consistency, constipation prevalence/severity, laxative use, fecal transit time, GI symptoms, microbiota outcomes) in older adults,
with subgroup data for males if available. When sex-specific data were absent, findings for older adult populations were
considered and sex-data reporting quality was evaluated.
Results
The evidence supports that increased total dietary fiber (and fiber supplementation, particularly psyllium) improves stool
frequency and consistency and reduces constipation in older adults, with recommended intakes around ≥25 g/day for optimal
laxation in many guidelines. Psyllium and other soluble fibers at doses >10 g/day over ≥4 weeks show consistent benefit for
chronic constipation outcomes. Fiber interventions can reduce laxative reliance and favorably modulate gut microbiota, though
heterogeneity exists across fiber types, doses, and study populations. Direct evidence specifically addressing elderly males is
limited because many trials either enroll mixed-sex cohorts or do not report sex-disaggregated outcomes.
Conclusions
Dietary fiber is an evidence-based, low-cost strategy to improve GI function in older adults and likely benefits elderly males
similarly to mixed older populations. However, sex-disaggregated RCTs and mechanistic studies in elderly men are lacking.
Recommendations: prioritize a food-first approach aiming for ~25 g/day total fiber (gradual increase with adequate hydration),
consider psyllium supplementation (when needed) at clinically studied doses, and monitor for bloating or drug–fiber
interactions. Future research should report sex-stratified outcomes and evaluate long-term impacts on quality of life and
healthcare use.
References :
- O’Brien L, et al. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the dietary fiber… (AJCN / 2024). (Systematic review summarizing fiber for constipation and guidelines recommending ~25 g/d).
- van der Schoot A, et al. The Effect of Fiber Supplementation on Chronic Constipation in the Elderly: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis (2022). (Meta-analysis showing psyllium and >10 g/day benefit).
- Xi N, et al. Effects of Dietary Fiber Supplementation on Chronic Constipation in the Elderly: Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of RCTs (2025). (Recent evidence on fiber reducing laxative reliance and influencing microbiota).
- McRorie JW Jr., et al. Understanding the Physics of Functional Fibers… (2017). (Mechanistic review: viscous vs. bulking fibers, stool weight/transit effects).
- Guan ZW, et al. Soluble Dietary Fiber, One of the Most Important Nutrients… (2021). (Microbiota and fermentable fiber effects).
- Alahmari LA, et al. Dietary fiber influence on overall health… (Frontiers in Nutrition, 2024). (Recent review emphasizing source-specific effects and need for targeted research).
- Mayo Clinic / Harvard Health (patient-facing summaries) — concise guidance on fiber types, hydration, and gradual increase.
Background
Gastrointestinal (GI) problems—particularly constipation—are common in older adults and lead to reduced quality of life,
polypharmacy (laxative use), and increased healthcare utilization. Dietary fiber is widely recommended to improve bowel
function and overall GI health, but the strength and specificity of evidence for elderly males remains unclear.
Objective
To systematically review randomized controlled trials (RCTs), observational studies, and existing systematic reviews/meta-
analyses assessing the effects of dietary fiber (food-based and supplemental) on GI outcomes in older men (≥60 years), and to
identify gaps and practical recommendations.
Methods
Electronic searches of PubMed/Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library and clinical-trial registries were performed (through
2025). Eligible studies included RCTs, cohort studies, and systematic reviews that reported GI outcomes (stool frequency, stool
consistency, constipation prevalence/severity, laxative use, fecal transit time, GI symptoms, microbiota outcomes) in older adults,
with subgroup data for males if available. When sex-specific data were absent, findings for older adult populations were
considered and sex-data reporting quality was evaluated.
Results
The evidence supports that increased total dietary fiber (and fiber supplementation, particularly psyllium) improves stool
frequency and consistency and reduces constipation in older adults, with recommended intakes around ≥25 g/day for optimal
laxation in many guidelines. Psyllium and other soluble fibers at doses >10 g/day over ≥4 weeks show consistent benefit for
chronic constipation outcomes. Fiber interventions can reduce laxative reliance and favorably modulate gut microbiota, though
heterogeneity exists across fiber types, doses, and study populations. Direct evidence specifically addressing elderly males is
limited because many trials either enroll mixed-sex cohorts or do not report sex-disaggregated outcomes.
Conclusions
Dietary fiber is an evidence-based, low-cost strategy to improve GI function in older adults and likely benefits elderly males
similarly to mixed older populations. However, sex-disaggregated RCTs and mechanistic studies in elderly men are lacking.
Recommendations: prioritize a food-first approach aiming for ~25 g/day total fiber (gradual increase with adequate hydration),
consider psyllium supplementation (when needed) at clinically studied doses, and monitor for bloating or drug–fiber
interactions. Future research should report sex-stratified outcomes and evaluate long-term impacts on quality of life and
healthcare use.