Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Persons with the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) have a significantly higher prevalence of globus and migraine-like headache than age-matched control subjects. On the other hand, persons with organic disease of the esophagus or colon may have a reduced prevalence of functional symptoms involving the opposite end of the gastrointestinal tract. The dispersed pattern of symptoms in IBS suggests that some agent, such as a hormone, may be acting systemically.
...
PMID:Globus and headache: common symptoms of the irritable bowel syndrome. 63 Apr 98

The purpose of this review is to describe the relationship between panic disorder, somatization, functional disability, and high medical utilization. Data from community, primary-care, and specialty studies were reviewed to determine the prevalence of anxiety and panic disorder in these populations. Data from the Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study were reviewed to emphasize the effect of panic disorder on health-care utilization and health perception in a community population. Data on the prevalence of panic disorder in primary care and mode of presentation of primary-care patients with panic disorder were also reviewed. Finally, the epidemiologic psychiatric findings from our recent study of distressed high utilizers of primary care were presented. Panic disorder was found to occur in 1-3% of people in the study community and 1.4-8% of primary-care patients. Of people with or without psychiatric disorder, people with panic disorder in the community had the highest risk of having multiple medically unexplained symptoms and of being high utilizers of medical ambulatory services. People with panic disorder in the community compared to both community psychiatric and nonpsychiatric controls tend to perceive themselves as having poor physical health and to be high users of emergency and hospital inpatient services, as well as ambulatory services. Most patients with panic disorder present to their primary-care physician with somatic complaints, especially cardiac (tachycardia, chest pain), gastrointestinal (epigastric pain or irritable bowel syndrome), or neurologic complaints (headaches, dizziness, or presyncope). Patients who were distressed high utilizers of primary care had an extremely high prevalence of current panic disorder (12%) and lifetime panic disorder (30%), which supported the association between panic disorder and high medical utilization found in the Epidemiologic Catchment Area (ECA) Study.
...
PMID:Panic disorder: relationship to high medical utilization. 173 34

Abdominal migraine is well recognised in children, but in spite of anecdotal reports migraine is not well established as a cause of abdominal pain in adults. Functional abdominal pain is usually classified as either irritable bowel syndrome or nonulcer dyspepsia, but some patients have intermittent abdominal pain associated with headache or other migraine accompaniments and, in these, a diagnosis of abdominal migraine should be considered. It is possible that some patients with functional abdominal pain have migraine presenting with few or even no migraine accompaniments. There is no nonclinical objective standard for diagnosing migraine, and research in this area is therefore very difficult. Nevertheless, some patients with functional abdominal pain may respond to antimigraine medication and, if their symptoms are suggestive, a trial of therapy may be desirable.
...
PMID:Abdominal migraine: does it exist? 176 32

A questionnaire investigation was undertaken to compare the employment of alternative treatment in patients with irritable colon (CI) and ulcerative colitis (CU) as compared with a control group of appendectomized (A). A total of 430 questionnaires were sent out. The percentage of replies was 83 without significant difference between the patient groups. Alternative therapists were consulted more frequently by the CI group than the two other groups which did not differ from one another in this respect. Both CI and CU had employed "natural medicine" more frequently than the control group. Women and younger patients were the most frequent employers of the alternative system. The effect of alternative treatment was frequently experienced in the form of headache and discomfort in the locomotor system. The average expense of treatment was 1,000 Danish crowns (approximately 83 pounds). 23% of the CU group and 41% of the CI group experienced aggravated or unchanged abdominal symptoms compared with their complaints during the period of hospitalization 1-10 years prior to the current investigation. No correlation could be demonstrated between a favourable course and employment of the alternative system.
...
PMID:[Irritable colon and ulcerative colitis. Alternative treatment is used frequently]. 195 88

To establish the diagnostic safety and the prognosis in outpatients with non-organic upper abdominal pain, 37 patients were followed up 5-7 years after the index investigation. In only one case had the diagnosis been changed during the follow-up period. This was in a man who erroneously had not been examined sufficiently before entry. He turned out to have gallstones. Eighty-one per cent still had abdominal pain, but 51% had improved (P less than 0.005). At the index investigation back pain was reported by 76% and headache by 60%. At the follow-up study back pain was unchanged in severity, but headache was significantly improved. The course of abdominal pain was significantly correlated with the course of back pain and headache. At the index investigation a psychic symptom score indicating vulnerability was significantly higher than in a matched patient group with well-defined pain. It was unchanged high at the follow-up study and unrelated to the course of the abdominal pain. Fifty-four per cent of the patients had symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome, but the course of the abdominal pain was unrelated to this.
...
PMID:Chronic non-organic upper abdominal pain: diagnostic safety and prognosis of gastrointestinal and non-intestinal symptoms. A 5- to 7-year follow-up study. 247 Dec 56

Hand temperature norms are presented for 221 headache patients (migraine, mixed, and tension), 105 hypertensives, 45 irritable bowel syndrome patients, and 56 normal controls under conditions of resting baseline, self-relaxation, volitional handwarming, mental arithmetic, and cold pressor. The two vascular headache groups (migraine and mixed) had significantly lower hand temperatures across conditions.
...
PMID:Hand temperature norms for headache, hypertension, and irritable bowel syndrome. 263 72

A group of outpatients with chronic non-organic upper abdominal pain was followed up 5-7 years after the index investigation, to evaluate the predictive value of several variables on the basis of a questionnaire and a laboratory pain study. Fifty-four per cent had symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome. A low pain tolerance measured with an ischemic pain technique significantly predicted a poor course of the disease (P = 0.03). So did a high score indicating psychic vulnerability (P = 0.02) and two social factors: poor school and vocational education (P less than 0.01). Without significant predictive value were level of abdominal pain rated on a visual analogue scale, length of dyspepsia history, bowel habits, relation of pain to meals and to life events, heartburn, headache, back pain, dysmenorrhea, paresthesias in fingers or feet, present occupation, sex, marital status, days absent from work because of the disease, and consumption of tranquilizers, cigarettes, and alcohol. The findings indicate that psychologic factors and a low pain tolerance may be elements in this poorly understood syndrome. This is supported by earlier findings of a decreased pain tolerance and an elevated psychologic score in this group compared with controls.
...
PMID:Predictors for the course of chronic non-organic upper abdominal pain. 278 Dec 39

Fibrositis is a disorder of musculoskeletal pain and aching with at least a five to one female-to-male ratio. It is most commonly seen between the ages of 40 and 60, and has a prevalence in the clinic of 6 to 15 percent. Its most common mode of presentation involves generalized musculoskeletal pain and aching, but articular pain, axial skeletal pain, myalgias, and neurovascular complaints sometimes predominate. All patients have multiple areas of local tenderness called "tender points" that are easily identified during physical examination, and are diagnostic. Essential symptoms of fibrositis are disturbed sleep, morning stiffness, and fatigue. Additional rheumatic symptoms include subjective swelling, paresthesias, and numbness. Headaches and irritable bowel syndrome are common nonrheumatic complaints. Modest improvement follows treatment by tricyclic agents such as low-dose cyclobenzaprine and amitriptyline, by physical measures, and by reduction in stress. Remission occurs in 20 percent of patients, but is generally short-lived.
...
PMID:The clinical syndrome of fibrositis. 346 12

Forty patients with irritable bowel syndrome were randomly allocated to treatment with octylonium bromide (20 mg TID) or cimetropium bromide (50 mg BID) in a double-blind trial lasting for six weeks. Drugs were taken before meals, according to a double-blind schedule. Clinical evaluations were made of digestive and other symptoms, objective findings (pain at palpation, contracted colon, tympanites), and overall effectiveness of treatment. Statistically significant decreases in severity of abdominal pain and subjective scores for bowel habits were obtained in both groups. The only statistically significant differences between treatments were in nondigestive symptoms (asthenia, palpitations, tremor, headache, etc.), which improved more in the cimetropium bromide group. No severe side effects were observed in either treatment group.
...
PMID:Double-blind study of a new antimuscarinic, cimetropium bromide, in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. 352 59

We examined retrospectively premorbid factors that might relate to the development of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). We administered a semistructural interview to adult IBS patients, adults with symptoms of IBS who had not visited a doctor (nonpatients), and asymptomatic normals. Patients with IBS differed from nonpatients by reporting more severe bowel problems, more frequent doctor visits in childhood, and more pain associated with current bowel symptoms. These factors may contribute to the tendency of people with bowel symptoms to seek medical care. More patients, and in most cases nonpatients with IBS, reported poorer general health and headaches, stomachaches, and bowel complaints during childhood. They also showed evidence for greater parental attention to illness with more frequent school absences and doctor visits than normal subjects. Loss and separation during childhood, and in the current family, and conflicted or dependent maternal relationships were also more frequently reported among patients and nonpatients. These factors may contribute to the development of IBS.
...
PMID:Recollection of childhood events in adults with irritable bowel syndrome. 361 87


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>