- April is IBS (Irritable bowel syndrome) Awareness Month.
- Difficult to talk about, so IBS is under-diagnosed.
- IBS affects nearly 25% of adults.
- $1.6 billion in health-related spending each year in the US.
- IBS is not life-threatening but can cause significant pain and distress.
- No test to definitively diagnose IBS.
- More common in women than men.
- Used to be called, colitis, mucous colitis, spastic colon, nervous colon, and spastic bowel.
What’s the Problem?
- Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a group of symptoms that occur together, including
- Repeated pain in your abdomen.
- Changes in your bowel movements, which may be diarrhea, constipation, or both.
- No any visible signs of damage or disease in your digestive tract.
- IBS is a functional gastrointestinal (GI) disorder or disorders of gut-brain interactions, related to problems with how your brain and your gut work together.
- The brain-gut interaction causes the gut to be more sensitive and change how the muscles in your bowel contract, leading to pain, bloating, constipation or diarrhea.
- IBS symptom triggers:
- Foods
- Stress
- Emotional arousal
- GI infections
- Menstrual periods
- Gaseous distension
- Type of IBS. For the purpose of treatment, IBS can be divided into three types, based on your symptoms: constipation-predominant, diarrhea-predominant or mixed.
IBS Causes
- Doctors aren’t sure what causes IBS.
- Probably a combination of problems, different factors may cause IBS in different people.
- Certain problems are more common in people with IBS and may play a role in causing IBS.
- Stressful or difficult early life events, such as physical or sexual abuse.
- Certain mental disorders, such as depression , anxiety , and somatic symptom disorder.
- Bacterial infections in your digestive tract.
- Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, an increase in the number or a change in the type of bacteria in your small intestine.
- Food intolerances or sensitivities, in which certain foods cause digestive symptoms.
Diagnosing IBS
- Rome criteria. These criteria include abdominal pain and discomfort lasting on average at least one day a week in the last three months, associated with at least two of these factors:
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- Pain and discomfort are related to bowel movement.
- The frequency of bowel movements is altered or stool consistency is altered.
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- Manning criteria. These criteria focus on The more of these symptoms you have, the greater the likelihood of IBS.
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- Pain relieved by passing stool.
- Having incomplete bowel movements.
- Mucus in the stool.
- Changes in stool consistency.
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- Rule out other intestinal disorders that can be life threatening:
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- Ulcerative colitis
- Crohns disease
- Bowel infection
- Bowel cancer
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Treatments for IBS
- Lifestyle changes
- Minimize any dietary or stress-related factors in your life.
- Refrain from eating foods that brings on IBS symptoms, keep a food diary to help you track the foods that bring on symptoms.
- If IBS happens after eating, try eating smaller meals or eating more frequently.
- Medicines
- Anti-diarrheal agents (lomotil).
- Antispasmodics (dicyclomine, hyoscyamine) –need prescription.
- Laxatives can help with constipation but not pain. Use under the supervision of a physician.
- Anti-anxiety medications ( remember gut also contains a large nervous system so meds may be working directly on neurons not necessarily on anxiety).
- Fitness & Nutrition
- Changing the flora in your gut through ‘probiotic’ diet.
- 30 minutes of exercise can ease constipation and abdominal pain.
- Changing food choices or meal frequency.