IBS Diet: How a Dietitian Can Help You Identify Triggers and Improve Symptoms

Honestly, even if you don’t have IBS, following some of these eating guidelines might help you combat the occasional bloated, upset stomach. I always tell my patients, we don’t all have IBS, but once in a while we can have IBS-type symptoms. If you have IBS, here’s how a dietitian can help, and what dietary changes actually make a difference.

If you have irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), you’ve probably already figured out that food matters. A lot.

But the frustrating part is that there’s no single “IBS diet.” What helps one person can make someone else feel worse. That’s where working with a dietitian—especially one familiar with IBS—can be a game changer.

Why IBS and Diet Are So Connected

IBS is a gut–brain interaction disorder, meaning your intestines are more sensitive to:

  • Stretch (gas, stool)

  • Certain carbohydrates

  • Changes in motility

  • Stress

Food doesn’t cause IBS—but it can absolutely trigger symptoms like:

  • Bloating

  • Abdominal pain

  • Diarrhea

  • Constipation

The goal isn’t restriction.
The goal is identifying your specific triggers, and eliminating them.

What an IBS Dietitian Actually Does

An IBS-trained dietitian doesn’t just hand you a list of foods to avoid.

They help you:

  1. Identify Your Triggers (Without Guessing)

    Instead of random elimination diets, they guide you through structured approaches, like:

  • Symptom tracking

  • Food diaries

  • Systematic reintroduction

This helps separate:
👉 real triggers from
👉 unnecessary restrictions

 

2. Guide a Low FODMAP Diet (The Right Way)

The low FODMAP diet is one of the most evidence-based dietary approaches for IBS.

FODMAPs are fermentable carbohydrates that can cause:

  • Gas

  • Bloating

  • Diarrhea

Common high-FODMAP foods include:

  • Onions, garlic

  • Dairy (lactose)

  • Wheat products

  • Certain fruits (apples, pears)

But here’s the key:

A low FODMAP diet is not meant to be permanent.

A dietitian helps you:

  • Eliminate → then

  • Reintroduce → then

  • Personalize

Without guidance, people often over-restrict long-term, which can harm gut health.

3. Optimize Fiber (Not Just “More Fiber”)

Fiber advice for IBS is often oversimplified.

Some fiber helps. Some makes things worse.

A dietitian helps tailor:

  • Soluble fiber (psyllium, PHGG) → often helpful

  • Insoluble fiber (bran) → may worsen symptoms

The goal is the right type and dose, not just more.

4. Address IBS Subtypes

IBS isn’t one condition—it has subtypes:

  • IBS-C (constipation)

  • IBS-D (diarrhea)

  • IBS-M (mixed)

Diet strategies differ:

  • IBS-C → fiber, hydration, magnesium

  • IBS-D → FODMAP reduction, bile acid considerations

  • IBS-M → more nuanced balancing

A dietitian helps individualize this.

5. Prevent Nutritional Deficiencies

This is where I think dietitians help the most. Many IBS patients end up cutting out:

  • Dairy

  • Grains

  • Fruits

Over time, this can lead to:

  • Low calcium

  • Low fiber

  • Vitamin deficiencies

A dietitian ensures you’re still meeting nutritional needs while managing symptoms.

Common IBS Dietary Changes That Help

Across patients, a few patterns consistently show benefit:

  •  Reducing high-FODMAP foods (temporarily)
  • Limiting artificial sweeteners (sorbitol, xylitol)
  • Moderating caffeine and alcohol
  •  Spacing meals regularly
  • Increasing soluble fiber gradually
  • Staying well hydrated

But again—personalization matters more than rules.


The Bottom Line

IBS isn’t about finding the “perfect diet.”

It’s about finding your diet.

And that’s where a dietitian can make all the difference:

  • Less trial and error

  • Less unnecessary restriction

  • More symptom control

  • Better long-term gut health

References

Lacy BE et al. Bowel disorders. Gastroenterology. 2016.
Staudacher HM, Whelan K. The low FODMAP diet: recent advances. Gut. 2017.
Chey WD et al. ACG clinical guideline: IBS management. Am J Gastroenterol. 2021.
McKenzie YA et al. British Dietetic Association IBS guidelines. J Hum Nutr Diet. 2016.

DR. CARMEN FONG
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