Sigma Nutrition Radio

#601: Gallstones & Gallbladder Conditions: Impact of Diet – Angela Madden, PhD RD

53 min · 14. apr. 202653 min
episode #601: Gallstones & Gallbladder Conditions: Impact of Diet – Angela Madden, PhD RD cover

Description

This episode examines what we actually know (and importantly, what we do not know) about diet in relation to gallstones and gallbladder conditions. Much of the public-facing guidance around gallstones focuses on "avoiding fatty foods", yet Dr. Angela Madden explains that this long-standing practice sits on surprisingly weak direct evidence, particularly when judged against the standards typically expected for clinical dietary recommendations. A central theme is the need to separate two distinct questions: dietary factors that influence the risk of developing gallstones (prevention), versus dietary strategies intended to reduce symptoms or complications once gallstones exist (management). While the prevention literature suggests plausible, consistent associations with overall diet quality and lifestyle factors, the specific question of prescribing a low-fat diet to manage symptomatic gallstones lacks robust randomized trial evidence. Dr Angela Madden is a clinical researcher in nutrition and dietetics at the University of Hertfordshire, where she established and led the nutrition and dietetics subject group and now focuses her research on improving nutritional assessment, dietary interventions, and patient-centred outcomes in clinical and public health settings. Timestamps * [02:09] Discussion with Dr. Angela Madden begins * [06:53] Understanding the gallbladder * [08:08] Gallbladder disorders and their prevalence * [13:42] Risk factors and pathophysiology * [22:15] Dietary factors and gallstone formation * [27:20] Exploring dietary fat and gallstones * [34:09] Broader dietary considerations * [45:44] Practical dietary recommendations Related Resources * Go to episode page [https://sigmanutrition.com/episode601/] * Join the Sigma email newsletter [https://sigmanutrition.com/synopsis/] for free * Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium [https://sigmanutrition.com/premium/] * Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy [https://nutritionliteracy.podia.com/] course * Dr. Madden's univeristy page [https://researchprofiles.herts.ac.uk/en/persons/angela-madden/] * Cochrane Review: Madden et al., 2024 – Modified dietary fat intake for treatment of gallstone disease in people of any age [https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD012608.pub3/full] * Related episode: 513: Kidney Stones & Diet – Deepa Kariyawasam, RD

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episode #603: Should Dietary Fiber Be Considered Essential? – Andrew Reynolds, PhD artwork

#603: Should Dietary Fiber Be Considered Essential? – Andrew Reynolds, PhD

Dietary fiber is widely recognized as an important component of a healthy diet, yet it is not typically classified as an essential nutrient. In this episode, Dr. Andrew Reynolds explores whether that distinction still holds, arguing that the traditional criteria used to define essentiality may be outdated when applied to modern nutrition science. The discussion moves beyond simply acknowledging the benefits of fiber and instead examines whether it meets the foundational requirements of an essential nutrient. This includes considering its physiological roles, the body's inability to synthesize it in sufficient quantities, and whether low intake leads to a meaningful and reversible dysfunction. Drawing on evidence from prospective cohort studies, randomized controlled trials, and mechanistic research, Reynolds outlines the strength of the evidence linking higher fiber intakes to reduced risk of cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, colorectal cancer, and premature mortality. Reynolds presents a compelling case that fiber may play a fundamental role in maintaining normal physiological function and therefore warrants reconsideration within the framework of essential nutrients. Timestamps: * [03:50] Interview starts * [05:53] Understanding essentiality * [09:26] Could there be a deficiency-state for fiber? * [15:38] What are fiber guidelines based on? * [23:52] Fiber and chronic disease risk: dose-response * [28:59] Different types of fiber * [37:21] Fermentation and SCFAs * [42:55] Research priorities ahead * [50:04] Low fiber health risks * [58:02] Key Ideas segment (Premium-only) Related Resources: * Go to episode page [https://sigmanutrition.com/episode603/] * Join the Sigma email newsletter [https://sigmanutrition.com/synopsis/] for free * Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium [https://sigmanutrition.com/premium/] * Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy [https://nutritionliteracy.podia.com/] course * Reynolds et al., 2026 – Dietary fibre as an essential nutrient: [https://www.nature.com/articles/s43016-025-01282-0.epdf?sharing_token=oJCZam9aJMlvQKkjarHKANRgN0jAjWel9jnR3ZoTv0OK5DYeoh6060hWwrmqyfUnUCHDtrj7iPNmF3ku-gPVMSzqE6ZxUFoY-oG6faPZTNAJKfCKe3L8a3AlFaQGc5204yFeEE2E1hZCPwM2FdtAZSUfwaywX8BPBZazLLfjz-o%3D] * Reynolds et al., 2019 – Carbohydrate quality and human health: a series of systematic reviews and meta-analyses [https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)31809-9/fulltext] * Episode 482: Carbohydrate Quality & Health – Andrew Reynolds, PhD [https://sigmanutrition.com/episode482/]

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episode #602: Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) – Megan Hellner, DrPH, RD & Katherine Hill, MD artwork

#602: Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) – Megan Hellner, DrPH, RD & Katherine Hill, MD

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21. apr. 202650 min
episode #601: Gallstones & Gallbladder Conditions: Impact of Diet – Angela Madden, PhD RD artwork

#601: Gallstones & Gallbladder Conditions: Impact of Diet – Angela Madden, PhD RD

This episode examines what we actually know (and importantly, what we do not know) about diet in relation to gallstones and gallbladder conditions. Much of the public-facing guidance around gallstones focuses on "avoiding fatty foods", yet Dr. Angela Madden explains that this long-standing practice sits on surprisingly weak direct evidence, particularly when judged against the standards typically expected for clinical dietary recommendations. A central theme is the need to separate two distinct questions: dietary factors that influence the risk of developing gallstones (prevention), versus dietary strategies intended to reduce symptoms or complications once gallstones exist (management). While the prevention literature suggests plausible, consistent associations with overall diet quality and lifestyle factors, the specific question of prescribing a low-fat diet to manage symptomatic gallstones lacks robust randomized trial evidence. Dr Angela Madden is a clinical researcher in nutrition and dietetics at the University of Hertfordshire, where she established and led the nutrition and dietetics subject group and now focuses her research on improving nutritional assessment, dietary interventions, and patient-centred outcomes in clinical and public health settings. Timestamps * [02:09] Discussion with Dr. Angela Madden begins * [06:53] Understanding the gallbladder * [08:08] Gallbladder disorders and their prevalence * [13:42] Risk factors and pathophysiology * [22:15] Dietary factors and gallstone formation * [27:20] Exploring dietary fat and gallstones * [34:09] Broader dietary considerations * [45:44] Practical dietary recommendations Related Resources * Go to episode page [https://sigmanutrition.com/episode601/] * Join the Sigma email newsletter [https://sigmanutrition.com/synopsis/] for free * Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium [https://sigmanutrition.com/premium/] * Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy [https://nutritionliteracy.podia.com/] course * Dr. Madden's univeristy page [https://researchprofiles.herts.ac.uk/en/persons/angela-madden/] * Cochrane Review: Madden et al., 2024 – Modified dietary fat intake for treatment of gallstone disease in people of any age [https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD012608.pub3/full] * Related episode: 513: Kidney Stones & Diet – Deepa Kariyawasam, RD

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episode Coevolution With Foods? Multivitamins? Eating Too Early? – Ask Me Anything (SNP49) artwork

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episode #600: Finite Knowledge, Infinite Ignorance artwork

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