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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Psychological difficulties in patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) are strongly related to symptom severity and patient status. This has important implications for clinical practice, and the design and conduct of clinical trials. Psychosocial factors (personality, psychiatric diagnosis illness behavior, life stress,
psychological distress
) distinguish patients with
IBS
from patients with no
IBS
. Psychosocial difficulties (e.g., history of physical or sexual abuse, maladaptive coping, or "catastrophizing") predict poorer health outcome (greater pain scores, psychologic distress and poorer daily function, more days spent in bed, and more frequent physician visits and surgeries). When using the standardized Functional Bowel Disorder Severity Index, patients classified as severe are distinguished from moderates by several psychosocial difficulties and health-care use variables. In addition, whereas patients with severe illness report more pain, there is no difference from patients with moderate illness in terms of visceral sensation threshold. Given these data, it is important to consider psychosocial factors as predictive of symptom severity and clinical outcome, and this should be considered in clinical care and the design of clinical trials.
...
PMID:Do psychosocial factors define symptom severity and patient status in irritable bowel syndrome? 1058 72
This article reviews the evidence that psychiatric disorders have an adverse influence on the outcome of
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) and relates this to the close relationship between psychological symptoms and severity of abdominal pain, bloating, and diarrhea. Therefore, accurate measurement of psychological symptoms may be an important aspect of trial design for
IBS
therapy. The importance of
psychological distress
and health anxiety in differentiating "consulters" and "nonconsulters" for
IBS
is reviewed. The consequences of excluding from a trial people with certain types of psychiatric disorder or with a known past history of sexual abuse are considered.
...
PMID:The relationship between psychosocial parameters and outcome in irritable bowel syndrome. 1058 76
This analysis evaluated the association between sleep disturbance and gastrointestinal symptoms in women with and without
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
), and examined the role of
psychological distress
in this relationship. Women with
IBS
(N = 82) reported considerably higher levels of sleep disturbance compared to controls (N = 35), using both retrospective seven-day recall and daily diary recall for two menstrual cycles (P < 0.05 on 8 of 10 measures). We used daily diary data to estimate the association between sleep disturbance and gastrointestinal symptoms, both across women (ie, whether women with high average sleep disturbance have higher average gastrointestinal symptoms) and within woman (ie, whether poorer than average sleep on one night is associated with higher than average gastrointestinal symptoms the following day). The regression coefficients for the across-women effect are large and highly significant in both groups (
IBS
, beta +/- SE = 0.46 +/- 0.08, P < 0.001; controls, 0.57 +/- 0.13, P < 0.001). The regression coefficients for the within-woman effect are considerably smaller and statistically significant only in the
IBS
group (
IBS
, 0.06 +/- 0.02, P = 0.006; control, 0.01 +/- 0.03, P = 0.691). These regression coefficients showed little change when daily
psychological distress
or stress was controlled for, the one exception being the coefficient for the across-women effect in the
IBS
group, which decreased substantially but still remained highly significant. Because it is possible that gastrointestinal symptoms could, in fact, cause poor sleep, we also fitted the temporally reversed model to evaluate the association between gastrointestinal symptoms on one day and sleep disturbance that night. The within-woman regression coefficients were nonsignificant in both the
IBS
and control groups. In conclusion, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that poor sleep leads to higher gastrointestinal symptoms on the following day among women with
IBS
.
...
PMID:Sleep disturbance influences gastrointestinal symptoms in women with irritable bowel syndrome. 1079 60
Heterotrimeric G proteins play a pivotal role in postreceptor information transduction. These proteins have been implicated in the pathophysiology, diagnosis, and treatment of mood disorders and proposed as a state-dependent biochemical mood marker in mononuclear leukocytes.
Irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is associated with changes in mood, affecting patients' illness perceptions and behavior. We examined whether mononuclear leukocytes of patients with
IBS
have altered G protein measures. We undertook G protein functional measurements through agonist-enhanced [3H]Gpp(NH)p binding capacity and quantitative measures by immunoblot analysis using anti-Galpha antibodies in mononuclear leukocytes obtained from 19
IBS
patients (Rome criteria) and 19 healthy matched subjects. The study groups were similar in age, gender, and years of education. Mononuclear leukocyte functions of G(s) (21.3+/-8.3%) and G(i) (22.2+/-6.7%) proteins in
IBS
patients were similar to healthy subjects (24.8+/-4.7 and 25.2+/-4.0%, respectively). The relative immunoreactivities of the G(sa) (98.9+/-10.2%) and the G(ia) (104.2+/-11.5%) subunit proteins in mononuclear leukocytes of
IBS
patients were also similar to those in healthy subjects. Two patients clinically diagnosed as depressed were detected by the G protein assay. The results lend objective support to the contention that major depression is not a causative factor in
IBS
, nor associated with its severity. The G protein assay may provide an objective biochemical tool for detecting depression in
IBS
, differentiating it from
psychological distress
that is commonly diagnosed by subjective tests.
...
PMID:G protein levels and function as an objective measure of depression in patients with functional bowel disorders. 1100 21
Abdominal pain is an important symptom in
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
), but patients report typical pain intensities ranging from mild to very severe. In a sample of women, the authors sought to determine whether measures of systemic autonomic activity are related to self-reported pain intensity and the occurrence of pain in the postprandial period. One hundred and six women with
IBS
and 41 controls completed bowel symptom and
psychological distress
questionnaires and wore 24-h Holter electrocardiogram monitors to estimate global heart rate variability measures of parasympathetic activity and sympathetic nervous system/parasympathetic nervous system balance. About one-third of the
IBS
sample reported severe or very severe abdominal pain (n = 34/106), and about one-half of the
IBS
sample reported postprandial pain (n = 52/106). Even after statistically controlling for age, body mass index, and
psychological distress
, vagal heart rate variability measures were markedly lower in women reporting high pain (P < 0.01) and markedly higher in women reporting postprandial pain (P < 0.02). The vagal component of heart rate variability appears to be reduced in women with severe abdominal pain, especially in those whose pain is not postprandial.
...
PMID:Comparison of autonomic nervous system indices based on abdominal pain reports in women with irritable bowel syndrome. 1133 20
Community studies have shown that stressful life events,
psychological distress
, and depressive and anxiety disorders are associated with 1) a range of medical symptoms without identified pathology, 2) increased health care utilization, and 3) increased costs. In both primary care and medical specialty samples, patients who have syndromes with ill-defined pathologic mechanisms (such as the
irritable bowel syndrome
and fibromyalgia) have been shown to have significantly higher rates of anxiety and depressive disorders than do patients with comparable, well-defined medical diseases and similar symptoms. Other studies show that after adjustment for severity of medical illness, patients with depression or anxiety and comorbid medical disease have significantly more medical symptoms without identified pathology than do patients with a similar medical disease alone. Both childhood maltreatment and psychological trauma in adulthood have been associated with increased vulnerability to psychiatric illness and more medical symptoms. The substantial functional impairment, distress, and costs associated with medical symptoms without identified pathology suggest that research studies promoting a better understanding of the biopsychosocial cause of these symptoms may yield pragmatic, cost-effective approaches to treatment in medical settings.
...
PMID:Medical symptoms without identified pathology: relationship to psychiatric disorders, childhood and adult trauma, and personality traits. 1134 29
Visceral hypersensitivity was shown in patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID). The mechanisms underlying this sensory dysfunction remain undetermined. The initial hypothesis of a generalized reduction in pain tolerance was rejected by further studies that suggested a normal tolerance to somatic stimuli and led to the generally accepted assumption that pain intolerance is specific and exclusive for visceral stimuli in these patients. We wanted to revisit this theory by examining whether patients with FGID reported perception and tolerance to somatic pain differently from normal subjects and whether the response to somatic pain stimulus was correlated to gastrointestinal symptoms or psychological status or distress. Thirty-three patients with FGID (Rome II criteria)(F/M: 26/7; mean age 48+/-9.9) and 33 normal controls (F/M: 24/9; mean age 44.1+/-6.8) were asked to immerse their nondominant hand into 4 degrees C water for as long as possible (maximum 120 sec). Time before appearance of: (1) discomfort, (2) pain, and (3) withdrawing of the hand were noted. The intensity of pain was rated on a visual analog scale from 0 to 100. Self-report questionnaires were used to assess the severity of gastrointestinal symptoms (St-Luc GI index) and the
psychological distress
(SCL-90) in the patient group. Data are expressed in seconds as mean +/- SEM. Discomfort sensory thresholds were similar in controls and FGID patients (28+/-3 and 24+/-2, respectively; NS) whereas pain and withdrawing were significantly lower in FGID (41+/-3 and 76+/-6 sec) than in controls (62+/-6 and 102+/-4; P < 0.05). Pain intensity was similar in both groups (64+/-4 vs 67+/-3; NS). Female patients showed lower sensory thresholds than male patients and control females (pain thresholds: 39.8+/-3.4 vs 67.8+/-16.7 and vs 56.8+/-8.7; P < 0.05). Sensory thresholds were not different in subgroups of patients with FGID (
irritable bowel syndrome
and functional dyspepsia). No correlation was shown between sensory thresholds and gastrointestinal index or SCL 90-test. In conclusion, FGID patients showed a threshold to painful somatic stimulus that was lower than in normal subjects. These findings suggest that patients with FGID may have hyperalgesia and low pain tolerance that is not limited to the viscera, but that is part of a systemic general condition.
...
PMID:Pain hypersensitivity in patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders: a gastrointestinal-specific defect or a general systemic condition? 1171 67
It has been proposed that physical activity moderates physiological or psychological responses to chronic conditions. The purpose of this study was to determine if women with a chronic functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorder,
irritable bowel syndrome
, had less active lifestyles than healthy controls and to test whether active women with
irritable bowel syndrome
had less severe recalled or daily reports of GI, psychological, and somatic symptoms than inactive women with
irritable bowel syndrome
. Questionnaires were used to measure GI and
psychological distress
and somatic symptoms in 89 women who participated in this study. A daily symptom and activity diary was kept for one menstrual cycle. Women with
irritable bowel syndrome
were significantly less likely to be active (48%) than control women (71%) (X2 = 3.4, p = .05). Within the
irritable bowel syndrome
group, active women were less likely to report a feeling of incomplete evacuation following a bowel movement than inactive women (p < .04), yet active women did not have less severe recalled psychological or somatic symptoms than inactive women. Active women with
irritable bowel syndrome
reported less severe daily somatic symptoms, which were accounted for by a lower level of fatigue (p = .003), but not daily GI or psychological symptoms. These results suggest that physical activity may produce select symptom improvement in women with
irritable bowel syndrome
.
...
PMID:Does a physically active lifestyle improve symptoms in women with irritable bowel syndrome? 1184 62
In a population of 71 (57 female, 14 male)
IBS
patients seeking psychological treatment, we found expected levels of childhood sexual and physical abuse (57.7%) and expected levels of current Axis I psychiatric disorders (54.9%). Moreover, we found those who had been victims of early abuse had higher current Beck Depression Inventory scores. However, contrary to expectations, there were no significant associations between early abuse and current psychiatric disorder in this population, suggesting that those individuals with
psychological distress
are not exactly the same group with a history of abuse.
...
PMID:Early abuse, psychiatric diagnoses and irritable bowel syndrome. 1186 39
This paper presents an overview of
IBD
with a critical analysis of the causes and effects of
psychological distress
in persons with this illness. Based on this literature, risk factors for the development of
psychological distress
are delineated. It is recognition of these risk factors for the development and the early signs of
psychological distress
in this population that can enable nurses to prevent this unfortunate psychosocial consequence of this disease. Preventive interventions discussed include the following: treating comorbid psychiatric illness, enhancing problem-solving coping, facilitating mourning and grieving, reducing stress, enhancing the positive appraisal of uncertainty, increasing personal control, increasing social support, and educating patients, families, and others.
...
PMID:Prevention of psychological distress in persons with inflammatory bowel disease. 1203 97
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