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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The role of fructose and sorbitol, when ingested together, in the aetiology of
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) is controversial. The aims of this study in
IBS
patients, therefore, were to compare differences in symptom provocation with various doses of fructose-sorbitol and to relate differences in the extent of colonic
hydrogen
production after each dose to such symptom provocation. Two different mixtures of fructose and sorbitol--20 g fructose plus 3.5 g sorbitol ('lower' dose) and 25 g fructose plus 5 g sorbitol ('higher' dose)--were administered to 15 patients with
IBS
and to 24 healthy controls. Breath
hydrogen
concentrations were determined at 10-min intervals for 3 h after ingestion of each mixture, and the presence and severity of a range of gastrointestinal symptoms were recorded on a standard form before, during, and after the study. Total symptom score in
IBS
patients, but not controls, was greater (p < 0.05) after the higher than after the lower dose of fructose-sorbitol mixture, and, for the higher dose, symptoms were significantly greater in
IBS
patients than in controls (p < 0.05). Moreover, the increase in total symptom score between the higher and lower dose mixtures was of a greater magnitude (p = 0.01) in
IBS
patients than in controls. No significant correlation was observed between the increase in symptom score and the increase in peak
hydrogen
concentration or the increase in integrated
hydrogen
response between lower and higher dose mixtures, although these latter increases were at times substantial.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Symptom provocation in irritable bowel syndrome. Effects of differing doses of fructose-sorbitol. 145 91
Because infants with colic appear to have abdominal pain similar to that of adults with
irritable bowel syndrome
, who may benefit from the addition of fiber to their diet, we tested whether fiber added to infant formula would alleviate colic. Twenty-seven normal, term infants (aged 2 to 8 weeks; 14 girls) with colic, defined as crying plus fussing for more than 3 hours a day for at least 3 days of a 6-day baseline period, were enrolled. Infants were randomly assigned in 9-day periods to a sequence of placebo (Isomil formula) followed by fiber-supplemented formula (Isomil plus soy polysaccharide) (n = 12) or the reverse (n = 15). Daily diaries of crying, fussing, sleeping, formula, intake, and stooling were kept. Twenty-two infants completed three lactulose breath
hydrogen
tests at the end of the baseline period and after each study period. The crossover trial was followed by 30 to 35 days of use of the study formula chosen by the parents as most beneficial but unknown to the investigators. Growth was monitored throughout. Serum cholesterol, calcium, phosphate, albumin, iron, and zinc concentrations were measured at the conclusion. There were no significant differences in average daily time spent by the infants in fussing and crying during ingestion of the fiber-supplemented formula. However, parents of 18 of 27 infants chose fiber-supplemented formula as most beneficial in ameliorating symptoms of colic. While the infants were consuming fiber-supplemented formula, stool frequency increased, and breath
hydrogen
excretion increased significantly, in response to lactulose. Growth and serum biochemical measurements were normal in all infants. Supplementation of infant formula with the level of soy polysaccharide used in this study may have reduced crying and fussing in some infants but did not affect colicky behavior in the majority of infants, who continued to cry and fuss excessively.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the effect of a fiber-enriched formula on infant colic. 165 81
The effect of a single subcutaneous injection of octreotide (50 micrograms) on mouth-to-caecum transit time was determined in patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
who complained of bowel frequency, and in healthy volunteers. The assessment of mouth-to-caecum transit time was performed by monitoring breath
hydrogen
concentration and noting a sustained 10 p.p.m. rise after ingestion of lactulose 40 ml. Measurements were performed fasting, and on a separate day, after a standard breakfast which included 40 ml lactulose. The studies were performed double-blind in a pre-determined random order. Octreotide prolonged mouth-to-caecum transit time in
irritable bowel syndrome
patients and healthy subjects by factors of 2.4 and 2.6 after lactulose when fasting, respectively, and by factors of 2.8 and 2.6 after the breakfast which contained lactulose. The upper gastrointestinal transit rate was similar in
irritable bowel syndrome
patients and healthy controls.
...
PMID:Effect of octreotide on mouth-to-caecum transit time in healthy subjects and in the irritable bowel syndrome. 210 84
Breath
hydrogen
(H2) exhalation after xylose administration reflects the malabsorbed portion of the pentose and thus might facilitate the application of the D-xylose test. Therefore, as a complementary parameter, breath H2-exhalation in response to 25 g D-xylose was assessed in control subjects, in patients with coeliac disease, with chronic pancreatitis and with the
irritable bowel syndrome
. Patients with coeliac disease showed significantly higher breath H2 concentrations than the controls. Specificity and the positive predictive value of peak H2-increments greater than 56 ppm (i.e. greater than mean + 2 SD of controls) were 100%, but sensitivity was only 40%. In all patients with a positive H2 breath test, urinary D-xylose excretion and serum D-xylose increments were also abnormal. Apart from great overlap between controls and patients with coeliac disease, the failure to produce H2 in response to D-xylose in 12% of the 57 investigated subjects was the major factor limiting diagnostic efficiency of the test. Non H2 production could be shown to reflect a specific metabolic disability of the colonic flora and did not prove complete absorption of the substrate. It is concluded, that the 25 g D-xylose H2 breath test is of no clinical relevance for the diagnosis of celiac sprue but exaggerated breath H2 increases (greater than 56 ppm) with normal urinary and D-xylose tests were indicative for the
irritable bowel syndrome
in 5 out of 10 patients. The diagnostic impact of this constellation thus merits further investigation.
...
PMID:Clinical evaluation of a 25 g D-xylose hydrogen (H2) breath test. 227 52
The determination of
hydrogen
in exhaled air by gas chromatography was used for investigation of patients with relapsing diarrhea of various genesis. An increased H level on an empty stomach, regarded as a sign of bacterial growth in the intestine, was detected in 45% of examines, mainly in celiac disease immunodeficiency, intestinal tuberculosis, diverticulosis, diabetic enteropathy, and erosive duodenitis. An increase in the H level in exhaled air after a lactose tolerance test (50 g of lactose) made it possible to diagnose lactose deficiency in 38% of patients with chronic relapsing diarrhea. In the
irritable colon
syndrome lactose deficiency was detected in 40% of patients.
...
PMID:[Hydrogen test: its diagnostic possibilities in intestinal diseases]. 229 Mar 43
The lactulose
hydrogen
breath test was used to assess the effect of a single dose of the beta 2-adrenoceptor agonist ritodrine on orocaecal transit time in 11 patients (three men) with
irritable bowel syndrome
. Transit time (median values, range) was significantly longer (P less than 0.01) after ritodrine than after placebo (120, 50-200 vs 75, 40-100 min). Median heart rate was similar before treatments whereas the maximal increase in heart rate was significantly greater (P less than 0.01) after ritodrine than after placebo.
...
PMID:Single doses of ritodrine delay orocaecal transit in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. 231 Jun 59
Because even after low doses of fructose and sorbitol, fructose-sorbitol malabsorption has been found in a high number of patients with the
irritable bowel syndrome
, an etiological role of fructose-sorbitol malabsorption in the
irritable bowel syndrome
has been suggested. However, these studies have been uncontrolled. Therefore, a controlled study of fructose-sorbitol malabsorption in the
irritable bowel syndrome
compared with healthy controls was performed. Seventy-three patients, 23 men and 50 women with a mean age 43.1 +/- 1.7 years (range, 18-66 years) with the
irritable bowel syndrome
were compared with 87 age- and sex-matched control subjects. Fructose-sorbitol malabsorption was determined by a breath-
hydrogen
test (Lactoscreen, Hoek Loos, Schiedam, The Netherlands) following an oral load of 25 g fructose and 5 g sorbitol after a 10-hour fast. Fructose-sorbitol malabsorption, as shown by an H2 peak of 20 ppm over basal values, was found in 22 (30.1%) of the patients and 35 (40.2%) of the control subjects. With a lower peak level of 10 ppm over basal values, these percentages were 45.2% and 57.5%, respectively. Also, the highest H2 peak values (15.2 +/- 2.3 ppm vs. 21.5 +/- 2.6 ppm), time to reach peak levels (110.7 +/- 5.4 min vs. 107.1 +/- 5.9 min), and area under the H2 curve (1310 +/- 219 ppm.min vs. 1812 +/- 255 ppm.min) did not discriminate between patients and controls. During the test, symptoms developed in 31 of 70 patients and in 3 of 85 control subjects (P less than 0.0001). Symptomatic patients did not differ from asymptomatic patients regarding the presence or absence of fructose-sorbitol malabsorption, H2 peak values, and area under the curve. No differences could be identified between male and female patients or controls. In conclusion, fructose-sorbitol malabsorption is frequently seen in patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
, but this is not different from observations in healthy volunteers. Therefore, fructose-sorbitol malabsorption does not seem to play an important role in the etiology of
irritable bowel syndrome
.
...
PMID:Role of fructose-sorbitol malabsorption in the irritable bowel syndrome. 193 20
Small doses of the carbohydrate lactulose are widely used in the clinical setting to assess small bowel transit time because lactulose is not absorbed by the small intestine and its arrival in the intestine can be detected non-invasively by breath
hydrogen
testing. In this study, doses of this safe, widely used substance higher than those typically administered for transit tests were given to 12 healthy young adult men to produce symptoms of gas and intestinal distention similar to those commonly experienced by patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
and recurrent abdominal pain. Comparison of subjective and physiological responses to the administration of 0 and 30 g of lactulose in a double-blind placebo-controlled trial demonstrated that the 30 g lactulose dose produced significant increases in a number of measures reflecting the intra-intestinal pain stimulus. The results of the present study indicate that lactulose is a realistic and ethically acceptable stimulus for the production of transient mild abdominal pain in the laboratory.
...
PMID:Psychophysiologic responses to a realistic laboratory abdominal pain stimulus. 281 39
The relationship between abdominal pain and bowel gas from bacterial fermentation of undigested carbohydrate was investigated in nine patients with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
), six lactose malabsorbers, and 11 asymptomatic controls. All subjects took breath samples and marked analog scales for abdominal pain, bloating, and psychological stress hourly during all waking hours for 7 days. Breath samples were analyzed for
hydrogen
concentration within 3 days, and the concentration was corrected for storage time. Symptoms of pain and bloating were significantly more common in
IBS
patients than in lactose malabsorbers or normal controls, and pain was significantly correlated with bloating in
IBS
patients. Breath
hydrogen
concentration was similar in all three groups, and breath
hydrogen
was not correlated with pain ratings in
IBS
patients. Thus, abdominal pain may be related to bloating from gastrointestinal gas, but bacterial fermentation cannot be the cause of such gas. The most likely source is swallowed air. This study also demonstrates the feasibility of monitoring
hydrogen
production in the bowel in field studies by having subjects collect hourly breath samples.
...
PMID:Intestinal gas production from bacterial fermentation of undigested carbohydrate in irritable bowel syndrome. 292 57
Lactose malabsorption was studied by the
hydrogen
breath-test in 23 adults suffering from
irritable bowel syndrome
(group A) and in 47 healthy subjects (group B). The concentration of
hydrogen
in end-expired alveolar samples was measured after ingestion of 25 g of lactose. Among the 70 subjects, 6 (8.5 p. 100) were not
hydrogen
producers and were excluded from the study. Lactose malabsorption was shown in 51 of the remaining 64 subjects (79.6 p. 100). Among these 51 patients, 36 were healthy and 15 had an
irritable bowel syndrome
. The frequency of lactose malabsorption among the 43 healthy
hydrogen
producers was 83 p. 100. This value is similar to those observed in other studies (greek and italian). Our results suggest that lactose malabsorption is frequent among the tunisian adult population.
...
PMID:[Study of malabsorption of lactose by the hydrogen breath test in a population of 70 Tunisian adults]. 365 17
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