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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Assessment of the physiological effects of physical and
emotional stress
has been hampered by a lack of suitable laboratory techniques. Since hypnosis can be used safely to induce specific emotional states of considerable intensity, we studied the effect on distal colonic motility of three hypnotically induced emotions (excitement, anger, and happiness) in 18 patients aged 20-48 years with
irritable bowel syndrome
. Colonic motility index was reduced by hypnosis on its own (mean change 19.1; 95% CI 0.8, 37.3; p less than 0.05) and this change was accompanied by decreases in both pulse (12; 8, 15) and respiration (6; 4, 8) rates (p less than 0.001 for both). Anger and excitement increased the colonic motility index (50.8; 29.4, 72.2; and 30.4; 8.9, 51.9, respectively; p less than 0.01 for both), pulse rate (26; 22, 30; and 28; 24, 32; p less than 0.001 for both), and respiration rate (14; 12, 16; and 12; 10, 14; p less than 0.001 for both). Happiness further reduced colonic motility although not significantly from that observed during hypnosis alone. Changes in motility were mainly due to alterations in rate than in amplitude of contractions. Our results indicate that hypnosis may help in the investigation of the effects of emotion on physiological functions; this approach could be useful outside the gastrointestinal system. Our observation that hypnosis strikingly reduces fasting colonic motility may partly explain the beneficial effects of this form of therapy in functional bowel disorders.
...
PMID:Physiological effects of emotion: assessment via hypnosis. 135 91
Recent advances in the field of neuroimmunology have provided clear demonstrations of i) the neuromodulation of immune function, and ii) the involvement of the immune system in responses induced by psychologic stress in animals and in man. This has led to speculation about the role of the immune system in psychosocial disease. The
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is characterized by chronic gastrointestinal dysfunction, which may reflect in altered motility, epithelial function, or sensory perception in the gut.
IBS
is heterogeneous not only in terms of its clinical presentation but also in terms of its pathogenesis, and factors ranging from psychoneurotic behavior and
emotional stress
, to dietary fiber deficiency, food intolerance, and enteric infection have been implicated. There is evidence of an increase in the inflammatory cells present in the gut of some
IBS
patients and in an emerging literature that demonstrates the immunomodulation of the motor system of the gut. These findings invite speculation that the immune system may play a role in the pathogenesis and pathophysiology of at least a subpopulation of
IBS
patients.
...
PMID:Is the irritable gut an inflamed gut? 143 59
Irritable bowel syndrome
represent the most common gastrointestinal disease. It is characterized by abdominal pain, distension and abnormalities of intestinal transit. It is a functional disorder determined by
emotional stress
and by diet. The treatment is polyvalent, dietary, medicinal and psychological. In the medicinal domain the anti-spasmodics (anti-nicotinic and musculotropic), represent the first choice weapons in association or not with an anxiolytic, an anti-depressor, even an antalgic in the acute phase.
...
PMID:[Spastic colon: a multi-factorial pathology, a polyvalent therapy]. 221 10
The
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is an extremely common disorder. It is believed to occur usually after
emotional stress
and perhaps because of behavioural and dietary factors. There is definite evidence of disturbed gastrointestinal function associated with
IBS
; however, a diagnostic marker remains elusive. The current trend is to diagnose
IBS
on the basis of the patient's history and the findings at physical examination and after minimal investigation. The physician-patient relationship remains the most important factor in the management of
IBS
. Long-term benefit may be achieved with the use of dietary fibre supplements or stool-bulking agents. The evaluation of currently available drugs is difficult because of the placebo effect. Drug therapy should be aimed at specific symptoms and used mainly during the initial phase of treatment.
...
PMID:The irritable bowel syndrome. 327 78
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.
...
PMID:Psychosomatic factors in gastrointestinal disorders. 347 93
To assess the value of history in evaluating abdominal pain, 45 outpatients (25 women and 20 men) aged 16-76 completed a questionnaire. The affirmative replies of the patients with organic disease were compared with those of patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) by the chi 2 test. 17 patients had organic diseases while 28 had
IBS
. The features indicating an organic lesion (p less than 0.0005) were age over 50, history of short duration, bloody stools, bowel incontinence and urgency, pain at night, pain lasting minutes, colicly pain, and onset of pain 1-2 h after meals. Typical features of
IBS
(p less than 0.0005) were age below 50, frequent bowel movements of normal consistency, increased pain with
emotional stress
, a rigid personality and an exceptionally well-groomed appearance. From these findings the following conclusions are drawn: 1. Patients with organic disease always present with two symptoms indicative of an organic origin and with one highly significant symptom of
IBS
at most. 2.
IBS
is characterized by a broad range of various highly significant symptoms simultaneously. There is a larger number of significant symptoms against
IBS
(n = 10) than for it (n = 4). History serves rather to rule out
IBS
than to prove it.
...
PMID:[Irritable colon--yes or no? Does the anamnesis help in the decision?]. 707 92
There is considerable evidence indicating that patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
respond to emotional and environmental stimulation with increased colon motor activity. It has been suggested also that increased colon motor activity is not confined to the colon and may be representative of a broader disorder affecting the rest of the gastrointestinal tract in this population. The results of our current study suggest that anger may have a significant, although differential effect on antral motor activity in
IBS
patients compared to normal controls. We found that while antral motor activity did not differ significantly in our groups during rest, anger decreased antral motor activity in
IBS
patients and increased antral motor activity in normal controls. The difference was not attributable to a difference in anger levels since the groups did not differ in their response to the standardized anger stressor. Rather, the difference in the antral motor response appears to be qualitative and a possible marker for
irritable bowel syndrome
. Our data further suggest that increased colon motor activity in
IBS
patients during
emotional stress
is not a result of a rise in motor activity throughout the gastrointestinal tract, but a phenomenon that may be unique to the colon in this patient population.
...
PMID:Role of anger in antral motor activity in irritable bowel syndrome. 1071 33
This modest clinical pilot study was intended to provide preliminary data on the effects of hypnotic inductions tailored to an
irritable bowel syndrome
patient at each session compared to Palsson's manualized protocol. Patients (N = 8) who had not previously responded to any form of treatment were assigned randomly to either a tailored or manualized induction condition. Other than pretesting for hypnotizability, the procedure followed for the manualized group (n = 4) was exactly as prescribed by O. Palsson (1998). The identical procedure was used for the other 4 patients except that the inductions were individualized. All 8 patients showed favorable responses to treatment immediately posttreatment and at 10-month follow-up. Only the tailored group showed no incapacitating pain at posttreatment but greater
emotional stress
than the manualized group. The tailored group continued to improve and showed better results than the manualized group at 10 months, and the posttreatment emotional distress was significantly attenuated.
...
PMID:Effects of tailored and manualized hypnotic inductions for complicated irritable bowel syndrome patients. 1631 86
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
The aim of this study was to establish a pathophysiologic model of
irritable bowel syndrome
, and then to evaluate the pharmaceutical efficacy of ramosetron, a potent serotonin 3 (5-HT(3)) receptor antagonist, and other anti-
irritable bowel syndrome
agents in this model. Rats stressed by a conditioned stress procedure exhibited marked prolongation of freezing time, an index of fear level, and an increase in the frequency of defecation (P<0.01). A corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) antagonist, alpha-helical CRF, inhibited both defecation and freezing behavior, while the antidiarrheal loperamide inhibited defecation only. The 5-HT(3) receptor antagonists ramosetron, cilansetron and alosetron also inhibited defecation (ED(50) values: 0.012, 0.094, 0.078 mg/kg p.o., respectively) without affecting freezing behavior. Ramosetron showed longer-lasting effect on defecation than cilansetron. Stress also resulted in increases in both proximal and distal colonic transit rates. Ramosetron and other 5-HT(3) receptor antagonists at doses inhibiting stress-induced defecation also ameliorated both stress-stimulated colonic transit rates. These results suggest that ramosetron, as well as agents used for the treatment of
irritable bowel syndrome
with diarrhea, has beneficial effects against
emotional stress
-induced colonic dysfunction. Furthermore, this
emotional stress
model may be useful in evaluation of drugs to treat
irritable bowel syndrome
presenting with diarrhea.
...
PMID:Effect of ramosetron on conditioned emotional stress-induced colonic dysfunction as a model of irritable bowel syndrome in rats. 1765 8
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