
New
eBook shows you a better way
for
long term control of your
Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
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Irritable
Bowel Syndrome is a chronic condition but in spite of extensive
research, our understanding of the causes of IBS are
still
embryonic. The symptoms are different in individual sufferers and in
individual sufferers the symptoms of IBS
can vary from time to time.
This
makes it difficult to pin point one specific cause.
As
some patients the symptoms
of Irritable Bowel Syndrome
worsen after meals,
it is suggested that IBS is a dietary problem. This, however, is a
natural phenomenon. Food intake stimulates increase intestinal
activity.
This is the
gastro-colic reflex. In Irritable Bowel Syndrome, this effect is
exaggerated and symptoms develop. There is no clear evidence that food
reaction is a cause
of IBS but certain foods can aggravate symptoms.
Lactose intolerance and gluten allergy (Coeliac Disease) are considered
separate from IBS.
Some
experts suggest that Irritable
Bowel Syndrome is a motility disorder.
In IBS the transit time of passage of food through the gut is altered.
If it is too slow, more water is absorbed from the faecal residue
resulting in constipation. If it is too fast, not enough water is
absorbed and diarrhoea results. The chaotic behaviour of the gut in IBS
results in variable transit time and can cause constipation and/ or
diarrhoea. There is no clear evidence that Irritable Bowel Syndrome is
simply a motility disorder.
As
much
as 25% of people with Irritable Bowel Syndrome admit that their IBS
developed after a severe bout of gastroenteritis. This is more often
bacterial. During gastroenteritis, serotonin level in the blood is
elevated. High level of this hormone causes diarrhoea. In individuals
that go on to develop Irritable Bowel Syndrome, the serotonin level
remains high. This results in diarrhoea-predominant IBS.
This
raises the possibility that IBS is an inflammatory condition. However,
biopsies from the large gut of
Irritable Bowel Syndrome patients have
not shown inflammation.
The
inflammatory module triggered the idea that in IBS the large gut is
colonised by bad bacteria. Since Helicobacter pylori was implicated in
stomach problems and good bacteria had conferred benefits in other gut
conditions, probiotics were used to treat IBS. The
results vary. There
are two main types of good bacteria in the gut. Lactobacilli and
Bifidobacteria.There are very good trial results for some and poor
results for others. Bifidobacterium
infantis 35624 has shown benefits
in women with Irritable Bowel Syndrome. It helped both diarrhoea and
constipation. Trials, however, have been hampered by low numbers,
variable criteria and different species of good bacteria. The Mayo
Clinic reviewed trial results and concluded that probiotics for IBS are
largely ineffective.
Some
experts think that Candida is a cause of IBS. If
this was this case
antifungal treatment would help. A subgroup of gastroenterologists
thinks IBS is a hypersensitivity disorder. It is recognised that
symptoms of Irritable Bowel Syndrome can be triggered by stress, drugs
and food. Certain food will trigger significant worsening of symptoms.
It is still unclear whether hypersensitivity of the gut is a cause of
IBS.
The
more plausible cause
of Irritable Bowel Syndrome is a faulty Brain-Gut
connection. The Gut has its own nervous system called the Enteric
Nervous System and is connected to the brain via the Vagus nerve. The
body-mind aspect of IBS is becoming very popular with experts. Stress
can cause diarrhoea and depression can result in constipation.
The
Brain-Gut connection was demonstrated recently. With the use of
Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Positron Emission tomography,
experts are able to show gut activity directly related to brain
function.
The
Brain-Gut connection explains why treatment such as psychotherapy,
cognitive behavioural therapy, biofeedback and hypnotherapy are so
effective. Gastroenterologists are baffled by the great improvement
derived from hypnotherapy. Some case of refractory (nothing works) IBS,
following a course of hypnotherapy are symptom free and remain so at
the five year follow up. Listen in on a hypnotherapy session and you
will hear the hypnotherapist saying positive things about IBS and
giving the patient belief that control is within reach. Some create the
picture of the large gut as a river flowing smoothly along. Is the
hypnotist just adjusting the Brain-Gut axis is patient with Irritable
Bowel Syndrome?
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