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

A diet high in refined carbohydrate is implicated in the aetiology of some diseases of the colon-i.e., diverticular disease, irritable bowel syndrome, ulcerative colitis, non-occlusive ischaemic colitis, and pseudomembranous colitis. It is suggested that spasm of the smooth muscle is the common pathogenetic mechanism in these colonic diseases. The strength of the spasm producing increased pressure in the colonic lumen or wall and the length of time for which the colon has been affected are believed to determine the type of disease resulting. A diet high in refined carbohydrate allows the intense muscle spasm to occur because the physical buffering effect of faecal bulk is considerably reduced.
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PMID:Refined carbohydrate, smooth-muscle spasm and disease of the colon. 5 53

Intraluminal pressure recordings were obtained from the rectum and sigmoid colon in two patients experiencing attacks of proctalgia fugax. In each patient the pain appeared to result from contractions of the sigmoid colon, and not from spasm of the levator ani, rectal wall muscle, or anal sphincters, all of which have previously been suggested as the source of such pain. Proctalgia fugax therefore appears, at least in some patients, to be an unusual variant of the irritable bowel syndrome, in which pain is referred from the sigmoid colon to the rectum.
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PMID:Colonic motility in proctalgia fugax. 9 Aug 4

Spastic Colitis (SC) of the fifties has been deleted and included in the Irritable Bowel Syndrome, as inflammation is not present, and the disturbed intestinal motility may involve the small and large intestine. With the advent of colonoscopy, we could investigate this generalized common term. Between 1983 and 1988 we have studied 120 documented cases of SC by colonoscopy with multiple biopsies. In every patient, we relied on consecutive procedures to confirm the diagnosis. They included: Stool examination, barium enema, small bowels series, colonoscopy with multiple biopsies. Serological diagnosis of Amebiasis has been applied to 41 patients only. With a normal small bowels, barium enema revealed a severe spasm of the whole colon, or a segmental spasm in one part of the colon. In 53 cases (44%,) we have noted virtual absence of haustra in the tubular descending colon. Colonoscopy in all cases has revealed an active contraction with some congestion of the mucosa or hyperemia. Different degrees of inflammatory reaction shown on multiple biopsies make the diagnosis of SC in these cases more relevant. In the Afro-Asiatic countries where amebiasis is endemic, SC is to be considered, as colonoscopy is proving the prevalence of congested or inflammatory process in the colonic mucosa, even when stool examination is repeatedly negative for amebiasis.
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PMID:Spastic colitis and irritable bowel syndrome: which expression is prevalent? (A review of 120 cases). 141 94

1. The evidence reviewed here indicates that pinaverium bromide (Dicetel) relaxes gastrointestinal (GI) structures primarily by inhibiting Ca2+ influx through potential-dependent channels of surface membranes of smooth muscle cells. 2. The in vivo selectivity of pinaverium bromide for the GI tract appears to be due mainly to its pharmacokinetic properties. Because of its low absorption (typical for quaternary ammonium compounds) and marked hepatobiliary excretion, most of the orally-administered dose of pinaverium bromide remains in the GI tract. 3. Orally-administered pinaverium bromide does not elicit adverse cardiovascular side-effects at doses that effectively relieve GI spasm, pain, transit disturbances and other symptoms related to motility disorders. 4. Pinaverium bromide is the only Ca2(+)-antagonist with known therapeutic efficacy in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome and certain other functional intestinal disorders.
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PMID:Action of pinaverium bromide, a calcium-antagonist, on gastrointestinal motility disorders. 217 9

The effectiveness of a new calmodulin-independent spasmolytic, tiropramide hydrochloride, and octylonium bromide, an antispasmodic calmodulin-antagonist drug, was compared in a controlled trial performed in 60 patients with irritable bowel syndrome with spastic pattern. The effect of treatments was assessed according to the score reduction of following symptoms: abdominal pain, constipation, bloating and dyspepsia. Tiropramide hydrochloride administered at the daily dose of 300 mg for 30 days induced a faster and higher improvement than that observed during the administration of 120 mg daily of octylonium bromide. On 3rd and 5th day, treatment with tiropramide induced the relief of abdominal pain in a significantly greater percentage of patients (p less than 0.05). Besides, in the group of subjects treated with this drug the "pain" score was more markedly decreased. Furthermore, at the end of the study 88% of subjects treated with tiropramide and 47% with octylonium bromide had normal bowel habits. This difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.05). Both treatments are effective in reducing dyspeptic symptoms and bloating. We can conclude that tiropramide--having a significant antispasmodic effect combined with a regulating effect on bowel habits--besides eliminating spasm, would act by synchronizing and therefore normalizing the intestinal motility.
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PMID:[Controlled clinical study on the efficacy of tiropramide hydrochloride in the treatment of irritable colon: comparison with octylonium bromide]. 636 85

PFS is a characteristic and clinically recognizable rheumatologic syndrome. It is a very common condition, but only recently has investigational interest grown in this interesting syndrome. PFS should be diagnosed by its own characteristic features and not merely by excluding other conditions. Pathophysiology of PFS is not well understood at this time and needs further study. Sleep EEG studies in PFS have revealed disturbed non-REM sleep, and normal volunteers deprived of non-REM sleep develop many features of non-REM sleep develop many features of PFS, including musculoskeletal aching, tenderness, and fatigue. Psychologic studies have shown that only a subset of PFS patients have shown that only a subset of PFS patients are significantly disturbed as determined by MMPI scores, and PFS patients as a group are more stressed than RA patients and normal controls as measured by Holmes-Rahe Life Events Inventory. It appears that chronic anxiety-stress causes muscle spasm that can be appreciated clinically in some patients and indirectly, possibly by electron microscopic findings of muscle biopsy. Likely role of other factors, e.g., constitutional, trauma, posture, and weather are also discussed. Biochemical transmitters of pain remain to be studied in PFS. Lack of a specific physical or laboratory finding should not deter acceptance of PFS as an entity, since such specific findings are absent in other similar and well-accepted conditions, e.g., irritable bowel syndrome, with which PFS shares many other common features, including muscle tenderness and spasm. PFS is different from psychogenic pain, and any implication by a physician that it is "all in the head" is certain to perpetuate chronic pain and disability.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Primary fibromyalgia syndrome: current concepts. 659 Jan 71

A study was undertaken to assess the evaluation and treatment of chronic intractable rectal pain. Sixty consecutive patients, 23 males and 37 females with a mean age of 69 (range, 29-87) years and a mean length of symptoms of 4.5 years, were evaluated by questionnaire, office examination, anal manometry, electromyography, cinedefecography, and pudendal nerve study. In all cases, organic abdominopelvic and anorectal etiologies for the pain were excluded by extensive radiologic and endoscopic evaluation. All patients had failed conservative and medical therapy. Ninety-five percent of patients had one or more associated factors: constipation or dyschezia (57 percent), prior pelvic surgery (43 percent), prior anal surgery (32 percent), prior spinal surgery (8 percent), irritable bowel syndrome (10 percent), or psychiatric disorders (depression or anxiety; 25 percent). Possible etiologies for the pain included levator spasm or anismus in 62 percent, coccygodynia in 8 percent, and pudendal neuropathy in 24 percent of patients. Therapy for pain control included electrogalvanic stimulation (EGS) in 29, biofeedback (BF) in 14, and steroid caudal block (SCB) in 11 patients. Pain control was assessed by an independent observer at a mean of 15 (range, 2-36) months after completion of therapy. Continued successful pain relief was classified by patients as good or excellent after EGS in 38 percent, after BF in 43 percent, and after SCB in 18 percent; overall success was reported by 47 percent of patients. The presence of levator spasm, coccygodynia, or pudendal neuropathy did not influence outcome. The routine use of physiologic investigation of rectal pain may not be justifiable. Moreover, more than half of the patients were refractory to all three therapeutic options used in this study.
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PMID:Evaluation and treatment of chronic intractable rectal pain--a frustrating endeavor. 1185 48

Proctalgia fugax is a benign, self-limiting pain experienced in the perineum. It is common, but most sufferers do not seek medical advice. The aetiology is unclear, but a variation of irritable bowel syndrome, pelvic floor myalgia, and internal anal sphincter spasm have all been suggested. A careful history can elicit the characteristic history, and simple reassurance is often all that is necessary. For persistent symptoms, therapies that induce internal anal sphincter relaxation are of value.
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PMID:Proctalgia fugax. 1169 65

The majority of foreign gastroenterologists have their doubts whether there exist "undifferentiated" colitisis. They consider these to be a variant of the irritable bowel syndrome. We have examined 173 patients. Of these, 67 percent were less than 45 years of age with significant intestinal disorders caused by chronic colitis. Diagnosis of Crohn's disease and nonspecific ulcerative colitis had been excluded. The main complaints of the patients were constipations alternated sometimes with short-time diarrhea (61%), diarrhea (13%), spasmodic pains in the inferior parts of the abdomen (20%), abdominal distention, and rumbling (74%). In 79% there was tenderness in the sygmoid colon and caecum and spasm thereof. Rectoromanoscopy (RRS) revealed normal mucosa of the rectum and sygmoid colon in 70%, proctosygmoiditis (predominantly catarrhal) in 30 percent of cases. In proctosygmoiditis (vs the normal mucosa) motor dysfunctions, disorders of the contrast mass passage through the intestine, gaustrations were more often seen but the relief of the mucosa was intact. Results of morphological investigations of biopsy specimens of rectal and sygmoidal mucosas were compared with endoscopy findings. No histological changes were revealed in 23% patients with proctosygmoiditis whereas in cases of endoscopically normal mucosa moderate inflammation was rarely detectable. Inflammatory changes in the mucosa were to be seen more frequently by cytologic analysis than by biopsy but more rarely than by RRS. In this way, 25% patients with endoscopical diagnosis of proctosygmoiditis had normal cytological picture. The increased amount of intestinal enzymes (enterokynase, alkaline phosphatase) in stools does not permit differentiating the functional and organic types of the disease, but it significantly contributes to endoscopical, morphological, cytological, and clinical data. Our investigations show that "undifferentiated" colitis is a rarity and that one finds difficulty in differentiating between the above condition and the irritable bowel syndrome.
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PMID:[Differential diagnosis in "undifferentiated" inflammatory diseases and dyskinesias of the large intestine]. 1188 61

RAP is a common and challenging clinical presentation in general pediatrics and pediatric gastroenterology. The differential diagnosis is extensive and growing but dominated by functional disorders for which there are new diagnostic criteria despite the lack of specific confirmatory laboratory markers. Because FRAP, dyspepsia, and IBS are common and defined by clinical criteria, it is now prudent to initiate empiric therapy for suspected functional disorders while performing limited laboratory screening to exclude organic disorders. Using this approach, one is no longer bound to undertake extensive testing in all children with undifferentiated RAP. Alarm symptoms help identify children at greater risk for a specific underlying organic cause to their symptoms and can narrow the focus for diagnostic evaluation. Because of altered family dynamics, interaction with psychological comorbidities, and the child's disabled status, the role of the psychologist is critical in many cases. IBS is the most common single diagnosis in undifferentiated RAP and can be readily identified using the current Rome II criteria. The clinical patterns in children--pain plus altered bowel habits--help differentiate patients into diarrhea-predominant and constipation-predominant subtypes. Although the pathophysiology of IBS is unknown, specific approaches to identify and reduce triggers, pharmacologically reduce bowel spasm, and attenuate neural-pain processing are now commonly used and effective strategies.
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PMID:Differential diagnosis of recurrent abdominal pain: new considerations. 1499 44


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