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Treating the Mind Eases Irritable Bowel
FRIDAY, May 25
2007 (HealthDay News) -- Hypnotherapy, antidepressants
and other mind-centered treatments could help people
battling severe irritable bowel syndrome, a British
survey of the literature finds. Such treatments are
effective because "people who have irritable bowel
syndrome (IBS) don't necessarily have a clinical
disorder in terms of psychology but have certain
behavior patterns that make them vulnerable to
symptoms," explained Bu'Hussain Hayee, a clinical
research fellow at University College Hospital in
London.
He and Dr. Ian
Forgacs, a consulting gastroenterologist at Kings
College Hospital, compiled the survey, published in the
May 26 British Medical Journal, as a working guide for
physicians.
"In part, the
symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome are similar to
those you find in depression, so things that work for
depression work for it," Hayee said. Patients with IBS
"are not depressed," he said, "but the treatments work."
Symptoms of
the condition can include cramping, bloating,
constipation and diarrhea. The condition is surprisingly
common. The U.S. National Institute of Diabetes and
Digestive and Kidney Disease estimates that as many as 1
in 5 adult Americans will suffer one or more symptoms of
IBS at some time in their lives. Most people can control
symptoms with diet, medications and stress management.
One common
stress-management technique successfully used in IBS is
cognitive behavioral therapy, Hayee said. That's a
general term for a set of psychotherapies based on the
belief that changing the way a person thinks about a
condition can bring about improvement, even if the
condition does not change.
"It has proven
to be effective," Hayee said. "It focuses on the
patient's perception of symptoms rather than on the
symptoms themselves." Studies have shown that cognitive
behavior therapy is as effective in IBS as
antidepressant medication, and that its effects last
longer, he said.
Hypnotherapy
has also proven effective in small trials, although a
recent review found insufficient evidence to recommend
its widespread use, Hayee said.
In a condition
with such a wide range of symptoms, treatment must be
tailored to the individual patient, he said. "In
general, people who are more open to the idea of therapy
will do better," Hayee said.
IBS is a case
of "brain-gut interaction," added Dr. Sita Chokhavatia,
a professor of medicine in the gastroenterology
department of Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York
City, who specializes in treating the condition.
"There is a
'big brain' in the skull and a 'little brain' in the
enteric [intestinal] tract," she said. "Either you have
too much information going up or too much information
going down."
Treatment
requires doctor-patient discussion in a psychiatric
setting, Chokhavatia said. "You discuss it with patients
-- not so much as a psychological disease per se but as
a brain-gut reaction, so the patient can sense less
pain."
The focus must
be on the symptoms felt by a specific patient, she said.
"Cognitive behavioral therapy has been used more in
patients with constipation, where it has been shown to
be successful in some studies," Chokhavatia said.
Talks between
doctor and patient are used to establish levels of
anxiety and stress felt by individuals, she said. If
stress levels are high, hypnotherapy might be offered,
"like people trying to stop smoking," Chokhavatia said.
The official
government one-in-five estimate for IBS incidence might
be low, she added, "Lots of people don't complain,"
Chokhavatia said. "They feel symptoms but don't come to
the doctor."
Those who do
seek help have a reasonable chance of getting it under
control, in terms of gaining a better quality of life,
she said.
(The above
article has been taken from Forbes.com) |