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

Motility-like dyspepsia, a clinical subgroup of functional dyspepsia, refers to the cluster of symptoms which suggests an underlying motility disturbance of the upper gut. Characteristic symptoms, in addition to upper abdominal pain or discomfort, are nausea, vomiting, early satiety, anorexia, postprandial abdominal bloating and excessive repetitive postprandial belching. Patients with concomitant symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome are currently excluded from this clinical entity. Delayed gastric emptying of solids and/or liquids, postprandial antral hypomotility and antroduodenal incoordination, gastric myoelectrical arrhythmias and dysfunction of visceral afferents are the major alterations in upper gut sensorimotor activity which have been described. An empirical trial of medical therapy is warranted if there are no "alarm" symptoms at presentation. If symptoms are not relieved after 2-4 weeks, then investigations of the upper gastrointestinal tract, preferably by endoscopy, to exclude the presence of organic disease, is advisable. Management approaches are then reassurance, dietary manipulations and attention to psychosocial aspects. Prokinetic agents appear to be useful as short-term medical therapy in some patients, but optimum long-term treatment strategies, including the use of medications which may improve a diminished tolerance to gut distension, are not established.
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PMID:Motility-like dyspepsia. Current concepts in pathogenesis, investigation and management. 144 83

Gastrointestinal bloating is a common complaint met within the general practitioner's office. The most important cause of this symptom is an increase in the volume of gas in the gastrointestinal tract. Differential diagnoses include aerophagia, ingestion of gas-producing foods, gastric hypersecretion, bacterial overgrowth in the small intestine, disordered gastrointestinal transit, malabsorption or maldigestion of carbohydrates. In addition, nonulcer dyspepsia and the irritable bowel syndrome must be excluded. The diagnosis is based on a history of eructation, heart burn, flatulence and diarrhea, dietary habits, physical examination, laboratory analysis and apparative diagnostic measures. Therapy depends on the underlying cause of the disease.
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PMID:[Meteorism]. 191 70

Gastric motor dysfunction and concomitant gastric stasis have been implicated in the pathogenesis of nonulcer dyspepsia, but a cause-and-effect relationship is not established. Essential dyspepsia refers to a subgroup of nonulcer dyspepsia patients who have no evidence of irritable bowel syndrome, gastroesophageal reflux, or pancreaticobiliary disease. In 32 patients with essential dyspepsia, and 32 randomly selected dyspepsia-free community controls of similar age and sex, we measured gastric emptying of solids using Tc99m-Sulphur Colloid in a fried egg sandwich. Subjects with neuromuscular or other diseases that may alter gastric emptying were excluded. Symptoms were assessed by a standard questionnaire. Data processing was carried out "blinded" to the subjects' clinical status. Female patients took significantly longer to empty half the initial stomach activity (mean 90 min) than female controls (mean, 73 min; p = 0.02). The rate of emptying at 25 min was also significantly less in female patients than in controls. Female and male controls, and male patients, had similar emptying times. Delayed emptying was not associated with the occurrence of postprandial pain, belching, or nausea; there was a trend for the half-time rate of emptying to be greater in patients with abdominal distention. While gastric emptying of solids is slightly delayed in females with essential dyspepsia as a group, this may not explain their symptoms.
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PMID:Lack of association between gastric emptying of solids and symptoms in nonulcer dyspepsia. 258 62

Twenty-six Nigerians with irritable bowel syndrome are reported. Twenty-three patients (88.46%) belong either to the middle or upper socioeconomic class; 16 patients (61.5%) had predominantly constipation. Six of the patients (23.1%) had their first symptoms before the age of 15 years. No sex preference is shown by this study. The most common symptoms are flatulence and abdominal pain, which is relieved by bowel motion, belching, and/or passage of flatus. Cow's milk, stress, and a local diet of beans are the most common aggravating factors, while another local high-fiber diet of cassava was found helpful in reducing the intensity and frequency of symptoms in some patients.
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PMID:Irritable bowel syndrome in Nigerians. 334 88

Dyspepsia may be caused by reflux esophagitis. We evaluated the symptoms of 45 patients aged 52 +/- 14 years who had a follow-up of 1 to 5 years. Endoscopy and histology demonstrated microscopic inflammation in 14, isolated mucosal defects in 12 and severe inflammation in 19 of the 45 patients. Belching was the leading symptom in patients with microscopic and severe esophagitis, heartburn in mild esophagitis. Upper abdominal pain, nausea and vomiting were present in 31%, 24% and 22% of the patients, respectively. Thus, reflux esophagitis is frequently accompanied by symptoms of dyspepsia which resemble those of other causes of dyspepsia. In contrast, disorders of gastric and intestinal motility may be associated with esophageal motor disturbances, particularly in gastric dysrhythmia, diabetic gastroenteropathy, irritable bowel syndrome, and idiopathic intestinal pseudo-obstruction. How much the esophagus contributes to the clinical symptomatology of dyspepsia awaits further elucidation.
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PMID:Esophageal disorders in the etiology and pathophysiology of dyspepsia. 386 Sep 17

"Digest" is a international effort to record the prevalence of digestive symptoms in the general population. The international questionnaire was tested in German translation for reliability and reproducibility. The questionnaire consists of 14 symptoms, which were investigated by standardized questions. Each symptom was described in 3 dimensions: frequency, severity and impact on daily activities. 127 successive patients referred for upper gastrointestinal endoscopy were interviewed twice by a young assistant and by an experienced gastroenterologist before the diagnostic work-up. A further 72 volunteers served as a control group. In these volunteers no upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed. Reliability and reproducibility were calculated by the Spearman rank test. The most frequent diagnoses were: organic diseases (oesophagitis [28], gastric ulcer/erosive gastritis [32] and duodenal ulcer [18]); functional diseases (dyspepsia [32] and irritable bowel syndrome [14]). Reproducibility was satisfactory by accepted standards (p > 0.7). Reliability was very good, with r-values for each symptom between p 0.96-0.99. The impact on daily activities was highest in the case of heart-burn or localized upper gastrointestinal pain, and lowest in the case of belching and fullness. The questionnaire can be easily administered by the non-specialist and the results discriminate well between functional/organic diseases and healthy people, thanks to excellent reproducibility and reliability.
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PMID:[Validation of the "Digest Questionnaire" for consistency and reproducibility with reference to upper abdominal symptoms]. 965 26

While many definitions exist, dyspepsia is best considered a symptom complex (not a diagnosis) thought to arise in the upper gastrointestinal tract, unrelated to defecation. The symptom complex includes: upper abdominal/epigastric pain or discomfort, postprandial fullness, bloating, belching, early satiety, anorexia, nausea, retching, vomiting, heartburn and regurgitation. Patients with typical gastroesophageal reflux, biliary colic and irritable bowel syndrome should not be considered to have dyspepsia. After investigations, if a cause of dyspepsia is found, this is 'organic or structural' dyspepsia. If no structural cause is found, this is best called 'functional dyspepsia', subclassified into a) ulcer-like b) dysmotility-like c) reflux-like and d) unspecified dyspepsia. This symptom guided classification should be shifted to the first presentation with uninvestigated dyspepsia, prior to any investigations, to define a clinically useful guide to patient care. As there is considerable symptom overlap, it may be useful to combine together the ulcer and reflux-like groups into an acid-related dyspepsia group. In 1998, another approach would be to screen dyspeptic patients with an H. pylori test and classify them as H. pylori positive and negative dyspepsia.
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PMID:Definitions of dyspepsia: time for a reappraisal. 1002 67

In this study, Herbert Benson's (1975) Relaxation Response Meditation program was tested as a possible treatment for Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). Participants were 16 adults who were matched into pairs based on presence of Axis I disorder, primary IBS symptoms and demographic features and randomized to either a six week meditation condition or a six week wait list symptom monitoring condition. Thirteen participants completed treatment and follow-up. All subjects assigned to the Wait List were subsequently treated. Patients in the treatment condition were taught the meditation technique and asked to practice it twice a day for 15 minutes. Composite Primary IBS Symptom Reduction (CPSR) scores were calculated for each patient from end of baseline to two weeks post-treatment (or to post wait list). One tailed independent sample t-tests revealed that Meditation was superior to the control (P=0.04). Significant within-subject improvements were noted for flatulence (P=0.03) and belching (P=0.02) by post-treatment. By three month follow-up, significant improvements in flatulence (P<0.01), belching (P=0.02), bloating (P=0.05), and diarrhea (P=0.03) were shown by symptom diary. Constipation approached significance (P=0.07). Benson's Relaxation Response Meditation appears to be a viable treatment for IBS.
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PMID:The effects of relaxation response meditation on the symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome: results of a controlled treatment study. 1141 11

Aerophagia refers to a rather rare disorder that may occur in both children and adults that features repetitive air swallowing and belching and that may result in abdominal distention. There are few, if any, controlled studies to guide therapy, which remains largely supportive but may include behavioral therapy and psychotherapy. Bloating, distention, and other gas-related symptoms are common in functional gastrointestinal disorders, including the irritable bowel syndrome; their pathophysiology remains, for the most part, poorly understood. Two separate phenomena need to be distinguished in these disorders: gas production and gas perception. Thus, whereas gas production, which relates most closely to flatus emissions, is probably within the normal range in most patients with irritable bowel syndrome, gas transport or transit through the gut may be impaired and may lead to the retention of gas within segments of the gut. Visceral hypersensitivity, a common phenomenon in all functional disorders, may exacerbate the sensation of distention and contribute to other "gas-related" symptoms. Few controlled studies have addressed any of these issues. Although, on an empiric basis, dietary therapy may be partially effective in some situations, there is at present no data to support the use of any form of pharmacologic, endoscopic, or surgical therapy for any of these symptoms.
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PMID:Aerophagia and Intestinal Gas. 1209 73

Symptoms of excessive intestinal gas may be related to eructation, excessive or odoriferous gas evacuation, and/or abdominal symptom attributed to gas retention. Patients with aerophagia and excessive eructation can be usually retrained to control air swallowing, but if present, basal dyspeptic symptoms may remain. Patients with excessive or odoriferous gas evacuation may benefit from a low-flatulogenic diet. In patients with gas retention due to impaired anal evacuation, anal incoordination can be resolved by biofeedback treatment, which also improves fecal retention, and thereby reduces the time for fermentation. Other patients complaining of abdominal symptoms that they attribute to intestinal gas, probably have irritable bowel syndrome or functional bloating, and their treatment options specifically targeting gas-related symptoms basically include prokinetics and spasmolytics. There is no consistent evidence to support the use of gas-reducing substances, such as charcoal or simethicone.
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PMID:Treatment of Excessive Intestinal Gas. 1523 5


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