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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (
irritable bowel syndrome
)
8,033
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent advances in the investigation of brain-gut interaction in
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) were reviewed. Brain is suggested to play an important role in the pathophysiology of
IBS
on the basis of the following evidence. (1) Stress often induces major symptoms of
IBS
patients (Drossman et al., 1982), simultaneously with colonic hypermotility (Fukudo et al., 1987) or dysmotility of the small intestine (Kumar et al., 1985). (2)
IBS
patients rarely express symptoms or small intestinal dysmotility during sleep (Kellow et al., 1990). (3)
IBS
patients complain of more pain with balloon distension of the colon or rectum than normal controls; visceral perception is enhanced in
IBS
(Whitehead et al., 1990). (4)
IBS
patients often show psychoneurotic symptoms and extra-colonic somatic symptoms (Young et al., 1976). (5) There are some animal (Williams et al, 1987) or human (Dinan et al, 1990) experiments which indicate the possible involvement of brain peptide or brain monoamine in
IBS
. (6) Dysrhythmia or increased beta power in electroencephalogram is observed more often in
IBS
patients than in the normal controls (Fukudo et al, 1991) in addition to abnormal
REM
sleep in
IBS
patients (Kumar et al., 1992). These observations support our hypothesis that not only the gut but also the brain show dysfunction and exaggerated responsivity to the stimuli in
IBS
. Further research on brain-gut interaction in
IBS
is warranted.
...
PMID:[Brain-gut interactions in irritable bowel syndrome: physiological and psychological aspect]. 133 64
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)
...
PMID:Primary fibromyalgia syndrome: current concepts. 659 Jan 71
In this review, an integration of GI functioning is attempted with regard to its relationship to sleep, how this interaction may lead to complaints of sleep disorders, and the pathogenesis of some GI disorders. Data are presented to support the notion that sleep-related GER is an important factor not only in the development of esophagitis but also in the respiratory complications of GER. Although sensory functioning is altered markedly during sleep with regard to most standard sensory functions (eg, auditory), there seems to be an enhancement of some visceral sensation during sleep that seems to protect the tracheobronchial tree from aspiration of gastric contents reflux during sleep. Patients who have functional bowel disorders reveal an increase in sleep complaints compared with normal volunteers. The actual mechanisms of these disturbances remain somewhat obscure and studies do not demonstrate any consistent abnormalities in sleep patterns of these patients. Some studies show that autonomic functioning during sleep, particularly
REM
sleep, can distinguish patients who have
IBS
. Thus, the continued study of sleep and GI functioning promises to create a new dimension in the understanding of the pathophysiology of a variety of GI disorders.
...
PMID:Sleep and the gastrointestinal tract. 1624 13
The objective was to investigate whether predominant symptom patterns in women with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
) affect autonomic activity during sleep. Seventy-five women with
IBS
underwent a polysomnographic sleep study. Twenty-two of the
IBS
patients were diarrhea-predominant (IBS-D), 33 were constipation-predominant (IBS-C), and 20 patients had alternating symptoms (IBS-A). Autonomic activity was measured by heart rate variability. The
IBS
-D group had significant vagal withdrawal compared to the
IBS
-A group during
REM
and non-
REM
sleep (P < 0.05). The
IBS
-D symptom subgroup had significantly (P < 0.05) greater sympathetic dominance during non-
REM
than
IBS
-A patients. Lower abdominal pain correlated with sympathetic dominance during sleep in the
IBS
-D group (r=0.54, P < 0.01). The
IBS
-D patients were physiologically distinct with regard to autonomic functioning during sleep compared to the alternating patients, but not the constipated patients. Sleep appears to unmask differences in autonomic activity that may distinguish
IBS
patients.
...
PMID:Sleep-related autonomic disturbances in symptom subgroups of women with irritable bowel syndrome. 1708 Feb 47
This study compared heart-rate variability (HRV) indices of autonomic nervous system function during two nights of sleep between women with
irritable bowel syndrome
(
IBS
, n = 35) and healthy controls (n = 38), and among subgroups within the
IBS
sample based on predominant stool patterns. HRV measures were estimated in conjunction with polysomnographic sleep scoring to define sleep stage-specific autonomic indices. Overall, there were no differences in indicators of HRV between women with
IBS
and controls. However, within the
IBS
group, women with diarrhea-predominant
IBS
demonstrated significantly increased parasympathetic modulation and lower sympathetic/parasympathetic nervous system balance across sequential NREM periods and
REM
cycles compared to both constipation-predominant and alternating
IBS
subjects. These results suggest that differences in mean level of HRV between predominant bowel groups in
IBS
patients are large, and that this effect is consistent in the different sleep stages and at different times of night.
...
PMID:Autonomic nervous system function during sleep among women with irritable bowel syndrome. 1793 47