New Treatments Needed For Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Main Category: Irritable-Bowel SyndromeAlso Included In: GastroIntestinal / Gastroenterology
Article Date: 11 May 2007 - 1:00 PDT
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More effective remedies for Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) are needed, as well as increased availability of treatments shown to be effective against IBS, such as hypnosis, says a Comment in this week's special gastroenterology edition of The Lancet.
The Comment is authored by Professor Robin Spiller, Wolfson Digestive Diseases Centre, University Hospital Nottingham, UK.
He says: "IBS is one of the commonest reasons for a consultation. However, because the disorder is poorly understood, many doctors find patients with IBS difficult to treat.
"Although extra time and effort may be needed, successful management is rewarding because it can substantially improve quality of life."
IBS has a similar incidence in Europe and the USA, and is increasingly recognised in developing countries, with between 5 - 10% of the population estimated to be affected.
Patients who present with IBS are typically female, aged 20 - 40 years. Most patients have abdominal pain or discomfort intermittently, with flares of pain lasting two to four days. Other symptoms include bloating, abnormal stool frequency and abnormal defecation.
IBS is also associated with psychological distress, with 50% of IBS patients who seek medical care also suffering stress or anxiety. IBS patients also have substantially increased health- care costs, with patients consulting their primary-care physician twice as often as non-IBS patients. A third of IBS patients are referred to secondary care and also onto sometimes unnecessary specialties.
Professor Spiller says: "Most IBS patients require reassurance, explanation and lifestyle advice."
The effects of modifying the diet of IBS sufferers is uncertain - trials have shown systematic exclusion of certain foods (e.g. wheat, dairy products) helped around half the patients in an uncontrolled trial, but how much of this was placebo response was unclear.
Psychological treatments have helped patients cope with IBS but generally without improving their bowel symptoms. Hypnosis has proven beneficial is randomised trials, including the long term, but limited availability of this treatment is a major drawback.
Most doctors and most (but not all) patients prefer to use drug therapy, ranging from antispasmodics to treat pain to serotonin antagonists to combat urgency and diarrhoea, and soluble fibres to improve pain and bowel habit. Tricyclic antidepressants can also prevent pain especially where diarrhoea is one of the symptoms present. But true drug effects in trials (10 - 15%) were smaller than the placebo effect (40 - 50%).
www.lancet.com
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/70465.php>
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http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/70465.php.
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Consider Levels Of Bacteria In The Gut
posted by Sarah on 11 May 2007 at 8:40 amA few years ago, I was part of a clinical trial to reduce the amount of bacteria in the gut as a means of treating IBS. Prior to beginning the trial, the doctors measured the levels of bacteria in my gut to determine a base level.
While everyone has naturally occurring bacteria in their intestines, the levels found in IBS patients are oftentimes exponentially higher than those of healthy people - my levels were off the charts.
Also, it is theorized that people with IBS lack the automatic, involuntary muscle waves that keep waste flowing smoothly through the intestines. All this being said, perhaps we should be focusing not so much on the psychosomatic triggers for IBS, but on the very real physical causes: excess bacteria and the body's inability to monitor the intestine's automatic muscle movements.
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