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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
irritable bowel syndrome
is a common disorder of gastrointestinal motility. Abdominal pain, bloating, and inconsistent bowel habits are the hallmark symptoms of
irritable bowel syndrome
. Fever, weight loss, and gastrointestinal bleeding often indicate more serious pathologic gastrointestinal conditions, such as inflammatory bowel disease or
infectious enteritis
. Because
irritable bowel syndrome
is so prevalent in our society, the primary care physician should be able to readily recognize the clinical features of this disorder in order to spare patients expensive, unnecessary diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. In this review, the authors discuss the clinical and psychological features of
irritable bowel syndrome
and offer a useful approach to the diagnosis and treatment of this disorder.
...
PMID:Irritable bowel syndrome. 148 81
Although there is a wide variability in symptoms, disorders of colonic motility are the most prominent features in
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
). Stool weight is within the normal range but many patients appear to have abnormal rectal sensations. Straining even with soft stool is common. Dietary fibre stimulates ileocolonic flow and may induce more symptoms in
IBS
than normal. There is evidence of increased responsiveness of the
IBS
colon, both to the effect of eating and to stress. Defaecatory disorders are common and may reflect both increased or decreased rectal sensitivity. The normal colon is quiescent during sleep, but in
IBS
coma sleep is often abnormal, with more periods of arousal and the colon consequently more active. There is evidence of increased responsiveness to corticotrophin releasing factor, which mediates much of the effect of stress on the gut. Many patients show a sympathetic/vagal imbalance with relative excess of sympathetic influence in keeping with increased levels of psychological stress and anxiety. There is undoubtedly more than one cause of
IBS
and around 25% appear to develop symptoms after an
infectious enteritis
. This has effects on the entero-endocrine system which may take many years to subside.
...
PMID:Disturbances in large bowel motility. 1058 Sep 17
Irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is the most common disorder diagnosed by gastroenterologists and one of the more common ones encountered in general practice. The overall prevalence rate is similar (approximately 10%) in most industrialized countries; the illness has a large economic impact on health care use and indirect costs, chiefly through absenteeism.
IBS
is a biopsychosocial disorder in which 3 major mechanisms interact: psychosocial factors, altered motility, and/or heightened sensory function of the intestine. Subtle inflammatory changes suggest a role for inflammation, especially after
infectious enteritis
, but this has not yet resulted in changes in the approach to patient treatment. Treatment of patients is based on positive diagnosis of the symptom complex, limited exclusion of underlying organic disease, and institution of a therapeutic trial. If patient symptoms are intractable, further investigations are needed to exclude specific motility or other disorders. Symptoms fluctuate over time; treatment is often restricted to times when patients experience symptoms. Symptomatic treatment includes supplementing fiber to achieve a total intake of up to 30 g in those with constipation, those taking loperamide or other opioids for diarrhea, and those taking low-dose antidepressants or infrequently using antispasmodics for pain. Older conventional therapies do not address pain in
IBS
. Behavioral psychotherapy and hypnotherapy are also being evaluated. Novel approaches include alosetron; a 5-HT(3) antagonist, tegaserod, a partial 5-HT(4) agonist, kappa-opioid agonists, and neurokinin antagonists to address the remaining challenging symptoms of pain, constipation, and bloating. Understanding the brain-gut axis is key to the eventual development of effective therapies for
IBS
.
...
PMID:Management of the irritable bowel syndrome. 1175 47
Attention has been directed to the putative role of low grade mucosal inflammation in
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) on the basis of evidence showing that some patients with
IBS
have an increased number of inflammatory cells in the colonic and ileal mucosa. Previous episodes of
infectious enteritis
, genetic factors, undiagnosed food allergies, and changes in bacterial microflora may all play a role in promoting and perpetuating this low grade inflammatory process. Human and animal studies support the concept that inflammation may perturb gastrointestinal reflexes and activate the visceral sensory system even when the inflammatory response is minimal and confined to the mucosa. Thus abnormal neuroimmune interactions may contribute to the altered gastrointestinal physiology and hypersensitivity that underlies
IBS
. A brief review of the human and animal studies that have focused on the putative role of intestinal inflammation and infections in the pathogenesis of
IBS
is given.
...
PMID:A role for inflammation in irritable bowel syndrome? 1207 63
Irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is a functional bowel disorder in which abdominal pain is associated with a defect or a change in bowel habits. Subtle inflammation, especially after
infectious enteritis
, has been sometimes suspected as one mechanism of pathogenesis. This research was performed (1) to evaluate the prevalence of parasitic infections and (2) the possible association of
IBS
and parasitic infections. Fifty-nine
IBS
patients were recruited using symptom-based criteria (Rome Criteria II) with an absence of intestinal parasitic infection by direct smear method. Stool samples of individual patients were examined using 7 methods, ie examination for stool occult blood, simple saline smear method, formalin-ether technique, culture for Blastocystis hominis, modified trichrome stain, modified Ziehl-Neelsen method, and trichrome stain for parasitic and bacterial infections. Of the 59 patients, stool samples of 13 patients (22.1%) were positive for parasites. These were B. hominis (13.6%), Strongyloides stercoralis larvae (1.7%), Giardia lamblia cysts (1.7%), and non-pathogenic protozoa, ie Endolimax nana cysts (5.1%). The prevalence rate of parasitic infections in the control group (20%) was not statistically different from the patients. There was no statistical difference between B. hominis infection in
IBS
patients and control was found in this study (p = 0.87). In the
IBS
group, B. hominis infection predominated (13.6%), while other parasitic infections were found in 8.5%. The culture method for B. hominis is more sensitive than the direct (simple) stool smear method, which is the routine diagnostic method in most laboratories. These results were also found in control group.
...
PMID:Blastocystis hominis infection in irritable bowel syndrome patients. 1568 92
A unified scenario emerges when it is considered that a major impact of stress on the intestinal tract is reflected by symptoms reminiscent of the diarrhea-predominant form of
irritable bowel syndrome
. Cramping abdominal pain, fecal urgency, and explosive watery diarrhea are hallmarks not only of diarrhea-predominant
irritable bowel syndrome
, but also of
infectious enteritis
, radiation-induced enteritis, and food allergy. The scenario starts with stress-induced compromise of the intestinal mucosal barrier and continues with microorganisms or other sensitizing agents crossing the barrier and being intercepted by enteric mast cells. Mast cells signal the presence of the agent to the enteric nervous system (ie, the brain-in-the-gut), which uses one of the specialized programs from its library of programs to remove the "threat." This is accomplished by stimulating mucosal secretion, which flushes the threatening agent into the lumen and maintains it in suspension. The secretory response then becomes linked to powerful propulsive motility, which propels the secretions together with the offending agent rapidly in the anal direction. Cramping abdominal pain accompanies the strong propulsive contractions. Urgency is experienced when arrival of the large bolus of liquid distends the recto-sigmoid region and reflexly opens the internal anal sphincter, with continence protection now provided only by central reflexes that contract the puborectalis and external anal sphincter muscles. Sensory information arriving in the brain from receptors in the rapidly distending recto-sigmoid accounts for the conscious sensation of urgency and might exacerbate the individual's emotional stress. The symptom of explosive watery diarrhea becomes self-explanatory in this scenario.
...
PMID:Effects of bacteria on the enteric nervous system: implications for the irritable bowel syndrome. 1743 18
Enteroendocrine cells (EEC) form the basis of the largest endocrine system in the body. They secrete multiple regulatory molecules which control physiological and homeostatic functions, particularly postprandial secretion and motility. Their key purpose is to act as sensors of luminal contents, either in a classical endocrine fashion, or by a paracrine effect on proximate cells, notably vagal afferent fibres. They also play a pivotal role in the control of food intake, and emerging data add roles in mucosal immunity and repair. We propose that EEC are fundamental in several gastrointestinal pathologies, notably Post-infectious
Irritable Bowel Syndrome
,
infectious enteritis
, and possibly inflammatory bowel disease. Further work is needed to fully illustrate the importance, detailed biology and therapeutic potential of these frequently overlooked cells.
...
PMID:Enteroendocrine cells: neglected players in gastrointestinal disorders? 2118 May 14
Visceral hypersensitivity is currently considered a key pathophysiological mechanism involved in pain perception in large subgroups of patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders, including
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
). In
IBS
, visceral hypersensitivity has been described in 20%-90% of patients. The contribution of the central nervous system and psychological factors to visceral hypersensitivity in patients with
IBS
may be significant, although still debated. Peripheral factors have gained increasing attention following the recognition that
infectious enteritis
may trigger the development of persistent
IBS
symptoms, and the identification of mucosal immune, neural, endocrine, microbiological, and intestinal permeability abnormalities. Growing evidence suggests that these factors play an important role in pain transmission from the periphery to the brain via sensory nerve pathways in large subsets of patients with
IBS
. In this review, we will report on recent data on mechanisms involved in visceral hypersensitivity in
IBS
, with particular attention paid to peripheral mechanisms.
...
PMID:Mechanisms underlying visceral hypersensitivity in irritable bowel syndrome. 2153 62