Title: Irritable Bowel Syndrome
1Irritable Bowel Syndrome
- John McLaughlin
- Clinical Lecturer/Consultant Gastroenterologist
- Hope Hospital, Salford.
2IBS
- What is (are?) IBS?
- Symptoms and diagnosis
- Aetiology
- Therapy and management
3What is IBS?
- IBS is NOT a disease
- IBS is NOT a singular pathological entity
- IBS cannot have a single aetiology
- but
- IBS is a useful term, coined to group patients
with similar, medically unexplained symptoms - IBS is difficult to manage, particularly
pharmacologically
4IBS features
- IBS patients have symptoms characterised by
- Unexplained abdominal pain
- Disturbed bowel habit
- Bloating
- No red flags bleeding, weight loss, abdominal
masses, malnutrition etc - Clinical diagnosis here VERY SAFE lt40-50 yrs
- By definition, conventional investigations are
normal colonoscopy, histology, blood tests,
radiology
5Current Diagnostic Criteria Rome II 1999
- At least 12 weeks or more (in last year) of
abdominal pain or discomfort with 2 out of 3 of
the following - Relieved by defaecation
- Associated with change in stool frequency
- gt3/day or lt3/week
- Associated with change in stool form
- Also supported by passage of mucus, bloating,
straining, urgency, sense of incomplete evacuation
6Problems with Rome II
- PATIENT A
- Abdominal pain
- Urgent loose stool 3-4 times each morning
- Sense of incomplete evacuation
- PATIENT B
- Abdominal pain
- Strains to pass pellety stool every 3-4 days
- Bloating
Can these very different patients really have the
same disorder or common pathophysiology?
7Diarrhoea-predominantIBS
- But when stools collected mean stool weight
150g/day in severe diarrhoea group - Diarrhoea is strictly gt300g/day
- More accurate to define as increased defaecatory
frequency
8Are symptoms confined to the bowel in IBS
patients?
- NO! Seek and you shall find
- Functional Dyspepsia
- Chronic Fatigue
- Unexplained muscle pain (Fibromyalgia)
- Temporomandibular dysfunction
- Bladder symptoms
- Gynaecological symptoms
- Headaches
- Backache
- (All these body areas are normal too when
investigated)
9IBS symptoms are common
- 3-30 prevalence in unselected subjects
- 5 of all visits to GPs
- 25 of all visits to gastroenterologists
- Estimated 1 annual incidence
- No mortality from the disorder itself
- cf mortality from drugs, investigations, surgical
procedures
10IBS symptoms are common
- 3-30 prevalence in unselected subjects
- 5 of all visits to GPs
- 25 of all visits to gastroenterologists
- Estimated 1 annual incidence
- No mortality from the disorder itself
- cf mortality from drugs, investigations,
procedures
11Alosetron 5-HT3 antagonist (GSK)
- Approved February 9, 2000, and voluntarily
withdrawn from the market November 28, 2000. - -Women with diarrhoea-predominant IBS.
- By November 10, 2000, FDA had reviewed 70 cases
of serious post-marketing adverse events - 49 cases of ischaemic colitis
- 21 cases of severe constipation.
- Of the 70 cases, 34 resulted in hospitalization
without surgery, 10 resulted in surgical
procedures, and three resulted in death. - In some cases alosetron produced constipation
serious enough to require surgery. - ?1350-700 risk of ischaemic colitis.
- Put back on the market June 7, 2002 with stricter
criteria, patient-doctor agreement
12?motility disorder
13Altered Motility?- probably not
- Evidence is inconsistent maybe just epiphenomena
of invasive study methods - Stress induces colonic contractility in IBS and
control subjects - Diarrhoea-predominant
- Prominent motility response to feeding
- Some reports of accelerated transit and fast
propagation of colonic contractions - Constipation-predominant
- Some reports of reduced propagation of colonic
contractions
14Where is the Problem ?
Hypersensitive Gut ?
?
?
Hypervigilant CNS?
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16Functional gut disorders
- VISCERAL HYPERSENSITIVITY
- Low thresholds to gut pain (eg inflating balloons
in rectum, pain with lower volumes in ballon) - Perhaps reflects previous injury?
- Inflammation, infection, nerve fibre injury (TAH)
- akin to secondary hyperalgesia eg after burns
- However, problem may still lie in central
connections why the associated disorders if due
to gut injury??
17Post-infectious IBS
- Post Campylobacter best reported (Spiller)
- Persistent neuroimmune dysfunction
- Persistent subtle inflammation
- eg mast cell infiltration increased permeability
- Enteroendocrine cell hyperplasia
- eg rectal 5-HT cells in rectum
- Increased circulating 5-HT reported in females
- IBS common in IBD
18Where is the Problem ?
Hypersensitive Gut ?
?
?
Hypervigilant CNS?
19Hypervigilance
- Can alter sensory thresholds by focussing
attention on any body area - If in pain, convinced somethings wrong, subject
will focus attention there - Vicious circle of increasing symptoms could arise
- Anxiety/depression heightens this further
20Prevalence of psychological problems
- Community IBS no excess
- GP
- Hospital
- Cause of symptoms or driver to seek medical care?
- Psychological factors may worsen outcome
- eg physical or sexual abuse reportedly
21Relative risk of postinfectious IBS- both
biological and psychological!
-
- Adverse life events in the previous year x 2
- Female sex x 3.4
- Hypochondriasis x 2
- All 3 factors x 7
- Bacterial factors 1 in 10 of Campylobacter
infected individuals developed post-infective IBS
compared with just 1 out of 100 with Salmonella
22Biopsychosocial model
- Likely that components from each of these
dimensions contribute to aetiology of IBS - . and other functional gut disorders
23Therapeutic approach to IBS
- Need a better understanding of precise causes in
mechanistically defined patient subgroups, not
just ROME compliant trials - Peripheral/central origins
- Symptom-based approach non-drug
- Behavioural, psychological, hypnotherapy
- Diet, exclusion
- Symptom-based approach drugs
- NB 20-70 placebo responses
- Placebo benefits last 12 months or more
24Therapeutic approach to IBS
- Positive diagnosis, rather than just failure to
find something else - Reassurance, minimal investigation
- Explanation
- problem with the wiring rather than the plumbing
25Evidence for Therapy in IBS
- Fibre
- Relieves constipation but worsens bloating
- Loperamide empirically helpful
- Antispasmodics/anticholinergics
- No good evidence
- But may safely provide the placebo benefit
26Evidence for Therapy in IBS
- Tricyclic antidepressants
- Superior to placebo in meta-analysis
- SSRIs
- No definite benefit from trials
- 5-HT3 antagonist (alosetron)
- 12-17 benefit in female D-IBS
- 5-HT4 agonist (tegasorod)
- 5-15 benefit in female C-IBS
- These need trials vs simple Rx not just placebo!
27Evolving Therapy in IBS
- Novel agents in development
- Antihypersensitivity
- Peripheral opioid antagonists
- Substance P, NMDA
- Central pathways
- Corticotrophin releasing hormone antagonists
- Motility
- CCK antagonists
- Inflammation
- Steroids unhelpful in PI-IBS
- Probiotics.
28Summary and prospects
- IBS will remain a major cause of morbidity until
its constituent causes are better understood - As it has a social and experiential component,
pharmacotherapy will largely be adjunctive at
best - Naïve studies with agents affecting visceral
sensitivity are the best hope at present
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