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Experts
Looking For Answers To Bowel Disease
April Is Irritable Bowel
Syndrome Awareness Month
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
is a disease that remains a quiet mystery despite the fact that physicians
believe it affects an estimated 30 million people in the US, nearly 65
percent of whom are women.
Essentially, IBS is an intestinal
disorder that causes chronic constipation or diarrhea with gas, bloating,
and debilitating stomach cramps. It has not been shown to lead to serious,
organic diseases, nor has a link been established between IBS and inflammatory
bowel diseases such as Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis.
Experts report that fewer
than 50 percent of sufferers ever seek advice from a physician. On average,
it takes more than three years to have IBS properly diagnosed, and patients
will see up to three physicians before the correct diagnosis takes place,
according to the International Foundation for Functional Gastrointestinal
Disorders.
Trying To
Understand Cause of IBS
And among health professionals,
there is still no clear consensus on what causes the disorder, although
a couple of successful medications have aided in its treatment.
That is why the foundation
has designated April as Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Awareness Month, to promote discussion of the disease's diagnosis
and treatment as well as the way it affects people's lives.
"The disorder has been around
for a long time, but it's been one that people haven't been willing to
talk much about," says Dr. G. Richard Locke III, a gastroenterologist
with the Mayo Clinic. "People don't like talking about their bowels."
People afflicted with IBS suffer
from spasms in the colon, a 6-foot-long tube that connects the lower intestines
to the rectum. This is the place where the waste matter from digestion
forms into stool, and movements of the colon push the waste along until
it's ready to exit the body.
The spasms are caused by a disturbance
in the interaction between the gut, the brain, and the autonomic nervous
system that regulates movement of the colon and bowels.
The nerve endings in the lining
of the bowel become unusually sensitive, while the nerves that control
the muscles of the gut become unusually active, Dr. Locke says.
"The bowels can be too slow,"
Dr. Locke says. "The bowels can be too fast. In addition, there's often
bloating, mucus and the feeling you aren't finished even after you go."
The condition does not cause
permanent harm to the intestines, and will not result in intestinal bleeding
or a life-threatening disease such as cancer.
No one is sure what causes the
syndrome. Physicians initially thought it was triggered by emotional
upset, an extreme form of "nervous stomach."
They no longer believe that
to be the case, although stress has been found to exacerbate or unleash
certain IBS symptoms.
Researchers have focused on
diet, genetics, or infection as the reason behind IBS.
"We've known for a long time
that some people will develop IBS after an infection, and we're slowly
understanding why," Dr. Locke says.
That line of research is focusing
on whether the inflammation that accompanies infection affects the way
the nerves that work the gut do their job, or whether a low-grade inflammation
remains in the gut following the infection.
"The infection itself is gone,
but it turns something on or in some way changes the body and that persists,"
Dr. Locke says.
Some
Treatments Available, More Needed
Because so little is known about
IBS, and because its symptoms are varied and unpredictable, physicians
and patients struggle to find successful treatments.
"In general, IBS can be challenging
to treat," says Dr. Lin Chang of the University of California, Los Angeles's
Division of Digestive Diseases. "There are medications that can treat
a specific symptom, but not many medications that can treat IBS overall."
Some people alter their diet
to help relieve symptoms, while others use over-the-counter medications
to combat constipation, diarrhea, and gas, Dr. Chang says.
Psychological counseling, relaxation
training, and hypnosis also have proven effective as non-medicinal treatments.
Over the last few years, a couple
of broad-spectrum medications have been approved for use in treating irritable
bowel syndrome as a whole. Tegaserod, also known by the trade name ZelnormTM,
is approved for use by women with IBS accompanied by constipation.
Alosetron, on the market under
the name LotronexTM, is used to treat women
with IBS with diarrhea, experts say.
"They both work by changing
the way serotonin works in the gut and brain," Dr. Locke says. "By activating
one type of receptor, you make the bowels move better. By blocking another
type of receptor, you slow down the GI tract."
LotronexTM was
taken off the market in November 2000, 10 months after the US
Food and Drug Administration approved its use, because it was
found to cause severe constipation that required surgery. Several deaths
were reported.
However, the drug had proven
so successful in treating severe cases that thousands of patients petitioned
the FDA to place it back on the market. The agency relented
in June 2002, but it is only available through physicians and only
for people with severe diarrhea who have not responded to other treatments.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
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April 2004
Experts
Looking For Answers To Bowel Disease
Trying
To Understand Cause of IBS
Some
Treatments Available, More Needed
Irritable
Bowel Syndrome Symptoms
Online
Resources
Irritable
Bowel Syndrome Symptoms
The Office of Women's
Health, US Department of Health and Human Services,
provides information on irritable bowel syndrome in the following summary.
Symptoms may include:
-
crampy pain in the abdomen
-
-
alternating diarrhea and constipation
-
feeling that you have not finished
a bowel movement
-
-
Foods that may cause IBS
include:
-
fatty foods like French fries
-
milk products like cheese or ice cream
(especially in people who have trouble digesting lactose, or milk
sugar)
-
-
alcohol, caffeine (found in coffee,
tea, and some sodas), carbonated drinks like soda
-
Sorbitol, a sweetener found in dietetic
foods and in some chewing gums
-
gas-producing foods including beans
and certain vegetables like broccoli or cabbage.
Treatments for IBS include:
-
drinking lots of water and increasing
your fiber intake
-
a fiber supplement to add soluble fiber,
often from psyllium seeds
-
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occasional use of laxatives (for constipation)
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antispasmodics -medications that
control colon muscle spasms and help with diarrhea and pain
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tranquilizers and antidepressants to
help with stress, anxiety, and depression.
Always consult your physician
for more information.
Online
Resources
(Our Organization is not responsible
for the content of Internet sites.)
American
College of Gastroenterology
Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
HealthierUS.Gov
National
Digestive Disease Information Clearinghouse
National
Institutes of Health (NIH)
National
Library of Medicine
National
Women's Health Information Center
Office
of Research on Women's Health
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