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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Gastrointestinal functions such as food intake, propulsive peristalsis, inhibition of reflux, secretion, digestion and defecation are controlled by a complex autonomous neurohumoral system, which is influenced by higher cortical impulses. Life stress may modulate these impulses and in this way cause two types of gastrointestinal reactions. Psychophysiological reactions involve accentuations, inhibition or distortion of the pattern of function of gastrointestinal organs without changes in their structure. Examples of this type of reaction are often painful accentuation of bowel movements in patients with the irritable bowel syndrome, and increased gastric secretion elicited by emotional stress. Psychosomatic reactions lead to morphological changes in the end organ, e.g. activation of peptic ulcer or ulcerative colitis. Psychophysiological reactions may be important in the onset of symptoms in some functional diseases, e.g. in the irritable bowel syndrome. These patients need support from the physician, but specific psychiatric therapy is required only in cases with severe psychopathology, e.g. in patients with anorexia nervosa. The role of psychosomatic reactions in the development of organic gastrointestinal diseases is still unclear, as is the value of specific psychiatric therapy in the treatment of diseases such as peptic ulcer or ulcerative colitis. If this kind of therapy has some effect, it may be directed mainly towards subjective symptoms.
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PMID:Psychosomatic factors in gastrointestinal disorders. 347 93

Antidepressants are recommended by some clinicians as therapy for irritable colon even when there is no evidence of clinical depression, since this syndrome may represent a type of chronic masked depression. Antidepressants may be a good alternative in elderly patients with peptic ulcer disease, particularly in those with concurrent depression. Advantages include once-a-day administration, lower cost, and ease of serum monitoring.
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PMID:Antidepressants: their uses in nonpsychiatric disorders of aging. 375 82

Although biofeedback has been applied to many gastrointestinal disorders, including reflux esophagitis, peptic ulcer disease, and irritable bowel syndrome, the limited number of reports precludes conclusions concerning its safety or efficacy in these disorders. Most studies have used biofeedback in the treatment of fecal incontinence. Uncontrolled trials have shown this procedure can reduce substantially the frequency of incontinence in 70% to 83% of patients at up to 1 to 2 years of follow-up. Biofeedback has been most successful in patients with a surgical cause for fecal incontinence, but recent data suggest the procedure may also be useful in diabetics. The few number of sessions required, its apparent safety, physiological appeal, and apparent success suggest biofeedback is a promising therapy for this disorder, but it remains inadequately tested.
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PMID:Biofeedback for gastrointestinal disorders: a review of the literature. 389 57

Abdominal and mental symptoms were assessed in 103 outpatients with chronic peptic ulcer disease. Patients with present symptoms and a history of duodenal or prepyloric ulcer were included if they had no other disorder requiring treatment. A normal female population was used for comparison of mental symptoms. Besides the cardinal ulcer or acid-related symptoms, there was a high rate of indigestion and bowel dysfunction symptoms, usually associated with the irritable bowel syndrome. Mental symptoms were reported by almost all patients. Symptoms of anxiety, depression, and neurasthenia were seen significantly more often among the female patients than in the normal women. We conclude that a wide range of both abdominal and mental symptoms should be taken into account in the therapeutic management of peptic ulcer disease, in evaluation of clinical trials, and in studies of the natural history.
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PMID:Symptom profiles in chronic peptic ulcer disease. A detailed study of abdominal and mental symptoms. 389 80

To compare the effects of conventional medical treatment with treatment that combines medical treatment and psychotherapy, 101 out-patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 103 with peptic ulcer disease (PUD) were randomly allocated to two treatment groups. All patients with PUD received medical treatment with antacids and anticholinergics or antacids and H2-receptor antagonists, while the patients with IBS received bulk-forming agents and, when appropriate, anticholinergic drugs, antacids and minor tranquillisers. In addition, the patients in one group with IBS and one group with PUD received dynamically oriented individual psychotherapy in ten hour-long sessions spread over three months. There was a greater improvement in the psychotherapy groups for patients with IBS after three months and for both IBS and PUD patients after 15 months. The difference had become more pronounced after 15 months, with the patients given psychotherapy showing further improvement, and the patients who had received medical treatment only showing some deterioration. In the short-term, the results were more in favour of the psychotherapy group in patients with IBS than PUD, but in the long run, the combination of medical treatment with psychotherapy improved the outcome for both IBS and PUD.
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PMID:A psychosomatic approach to treatment in the irritable bowel syndrome and peptic ulcer disease with aspects of the design of clinical trials. 389 86

In spite of the fact that both laymen and clinicians have pointed out their relevance, the psychological aspects of gastrointestinal disorders, especially their influence on etiology and pathophysiology, have been a matter of controversy and challenge to researchers. Difficulties in this field arise from several sources, for instance, the sampling methodology in the selection of patients and the heterogeneity of the disorders studied. When the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is compared with peptic ulcer disease (PUD), the personality features of IBS have not been described with the same consistency as the dependency traits of PUD. Also, IBS patients have been regarded as more neurotic and depressed than PUD patients. In this study of 101 IBS and 103 PUD patients, our overall impression was that mental symptoms and personality profiles were essentially the same in IBS and PUD, but that both groups differed from a normal population. We conclude that from a psychosomatic point of view IBS and PUD may be looked upon as different facets of the same underlying psychogenic mechanism. Although conclusive evidence of how psychological factors affect physiological processes and contribute to the clinical picture in gastrointestinal disorders is still lacking, it seems reasonable to state that they are often significant and must be considered in treating individual IBS and PUD patients.
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PMID:Psychological aspects of non-ulcer dyspepsia: a psychosomatic view focusing on a comparison between the irritable bowel syndrome and peptic ulcer disease. 389 89

The cause of intractable chronic diarrhoea was found to be malabsorption of bile acid in five out of 42 patients thought to have the irritable bowel syndrome, six out of 29 patients with persistent diarrhoea after surgery for peptic ulcer, 23 who had undergone small bowel resection, and two others. Specific treatment brought symptomatic relief. The diagnosis was established by measuring the proportion of SeHCAT, a synthetic bile salt, retained one week after oral administration of a tracer dose of less than 100 micrograms of the compound labelled with 40 kBq (1 microCi) of selenium-75. These results indicate that malabsorption of bile acid is a more common cause of chronic diarrhoea than is generally appreciated. Measurement of retention of SeHCAT is a simple, accurate, and acceptable means of establishing the diagnosis of this debilitating but treatable condition.
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PMID:Is bile acid malabsorption underdiagnosed? An evaluation of accuracy of diagnosis by measurement of SeHCAT retention. 391 8

We assessed the nutritional status of 119 patients with chronic gastrointestinal symptoms due to organic disorders (inflammatory bowel disease, IBD; peptic ulcer, PU; malabsorption syndrome, M; and malignant gastrointestinal tumours, T), by standard anthropometry and marker proteins (albumin; retinol-binding protein, RBP; and thyroxine-binding prealbumin, TBPA). We also studied 31 patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and 75 age-matched healthy controls (C). Compared with healthy controls, patients with organic bowel disease had significant abnormality of two or more anthropometric measurements (P less than 0.05). Plasma albumin was reduced in patients with IBD, M and T (P less than 0.001), but RBP and TBPA measurements were lower in all patient categories (P less than 0.01) including IBS. Stepwise discriminant analysis of the patient data alone, using three to six parameters, correctly separated 65 per cent PU patients, 66 per cent IBD and M, 72 per cent IBS and 88 per cent patients with T from other disease categories. We conclude that patients with chronic gastrointestinal symptoms often have some nutritional disturbances and that simple anthropometric and protein measurements might help us to distinguish patients with functional bowel disease from those with organic bowel disease.
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PMID:Nutritional assessment in patients with chronic gastrointestinal symptoms: comparison of functional and organic disorders. 392 30

Diagnostic significance of a simple and rapid screening procedure for determining the relative amounts of pancreatic and salivary isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor was evaluated in 242 subjects (controls 84, acute pancreatitis nine, chronic pancreatitis 28, pancreatic cancer 14, peptic ulcer 25, liver cirrhosis 15, cholelithiasis 24, irritable colon syndrome 13, diabetes mellitus 13, mumps seven, and chronic renal failure 10). Electrophoretically separated isoamylases of saliva and pure pancreatic juice were all inhibited at similar degrees to the corresponding unfractionated amylases. Total amylase and pancreatic isoamylase were elevated in all nine patients with acute pancreatitis. Pancreatic isoamylase was decreased in 12 of 28 patients (43%) with chronic pancreatitis and increased in nine of 14 patients (64%) with pancreatic cancer. The mean pancreatic isoamylase activity in the patients with acute pancreatitis was significantly higher (p less than 0.01), while that of chronic pancreatitis was significantly lower (p less than 0.05) when compared with controls. The inhibition method offers simple, rapid, and specific analysis of serum isoamylase for the differential diagnosis of hyperamylasemia in cases of emergency.
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PMID:Differential determination of serum isoamylase using an amylase inhibitor and its clinical application. 396 56

Gastrointestinal and mental symptoms were assessed in 101 outpatients with the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). A normal female population was used for comparison of mental symptoms. By definition all patients had abdominal pains and/or change of bowel habits (constipation or diarrhoea, or both) but no demonstrable organic disease. Upper gastrointestinal symptoms without peptic ulcer disease were reported by 87% of the patients. Mental symptoms were reported by almost all patients. Symptoms of anxiety, fatiguability, hostile feelings, sadness, and sleep disturbances were seen significantly more often among IBS women than in the controls. We conclude that patients with IBS frequently have upper gastrointestinal and mental symptoms that should be taken into account in the therapeutic management and evaluation of new modes of treatment.
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PMID:Upper gastrointestinal and mental symptoms in the irritable bowel syndrome. 402 24


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