What is Irritable Bowel Syndrome?
Irritable
bowel syndrome (IBS) is one of the most common ailments
of the bowel (intestines) and affects an estimated 15% of
persons in the US. The
term, irritable bowel, is not a particularly good one
since it implies that the bowel is responding irritably
to normal stimuli, and this may or may not be the
case.
The
several names for IBS, including spastic colon, spastic
colitis, and mucous colitis, attest to the difficulty of
getting a descriptive handle on the ailment. Moreover,
each of the other names is itself as problematic as the
term IBS.
IBS is best described
as a functional disease. The concept of
functional disease is
particularly useful when discussing diseases of
the gastrointestinal
tract. The concept applies to the muscular organs of
the gastrointestinal
tract; the esophagus, stomach, small intestine,
gallbladder, and
colon.
What is meant by the
term, functional, is that either the muscles of
the organs or the nerves
that control the organs are not working normally,
and, as a result,
the organs do not function normally. The nerves that
control the organs
include not only the nerves that lie within the muscles
of the organs but also the nerves of the spinal cord and
brain.
Some
gastrointestinal diseases can be seen and diagnosed with
the naked eye, such as ulcers of the stomach. Thus, ulcers can be seen at
surgery, on x-rays, and at endoscopies.
Other diseases cannot be
seen with the naked eye but can be seen and
diagnosed with the
microscope.
For example, celiac
disease and collagenous colitis are diagnosed by microscopic examination of
biopsies of the small bowel and colon,
respectively. In contrast,
gastrointestinal functional diseases cannot be
seen with the naked
eye or with the microscope.
In some instances, the abnormal function can be demonstrated by tests, for
example, gastric emptying studies or antro-duodenal motility studies. However,
these tests often are complex, are not
widely available, and do
not reliably detect the functional
abnormalities.
Accordingly, by
default, functional gastrointestinal diseases are
those involving the
abnormal function of gastrointestinal organs in
which abnormalities
cannot be seen in the organs with either the naked eye or
the microscope.
Occasionally, diseases
that are thought to be functional are ultimately found to be associated with
abnormalities that can be seen. Then, the
disease moves out of the
functional category. An example of this would be
Helicobacter pylori
infection of the stomach.
Many patients with mild
upper intestinal
symptoms who were thought to have abnormal function of
the stomach or intestines have been found to have an
infection of the stomach with Helicobacter
pylori. This infection can
be diagnosed by seeing the bacterium and the
inflammation (gastritis) it
causes under the microscope.
When the patients
are treated with
antibiotics, the Helicobacter, gastritis, and symptoms
disappear. Thus,
recognition of Helicobacter pylori infection removed some
patients' diseases
from the functional category.
The distinction
between functional
disease and non-functional disease may, in fact, be
blurry. Thus, even
functional diseases probably have associated biochemical
or molecular abnormalities that ultimately will be
able to be measured.
For example,
functional diseases of the
stomach and intestines may be shown ultimately to
be caused by reduced
levels of normal chemicals within the gastrointestinal
organs, the spinal
cord, or the brain.
Should a disease that is demonstrated to be due
to a reduced chemical still be
considered a functional disease? I think not. In
this theoretical situation, we
can't see the abnormality with the naked eye or
the microscope, but we can
measure it. If we can measure an associated or
causative abnormality, the
disease probably should no longer be considered
functional.
Despite the
shortcomings of the term, functional, the
concept of a functional
abnormality is useful for approaching many of the
symptoms originating from
the muscular organs of the gastrointestinal tract.
This concept applies
particularly to those symptoms for which there are
no associated
abnormalities that can be seen with the naked eye or the
microscope.
While IBS is a major
functional disease, it is important to mention a
second major functional
disease referred to as dyspepsia, or functional
dyspepsia. The symptoms of
dyspepsia are thought to originate from the upper
gastrointestinal tract; the
esophagus, stomach, and the first part of the
small intestine. The
symptoms include upper abdominal discomfort, bloating
(the subjective
sense of abdominal fullness without objective
distension), or objective distension (swelling, or
enlargement).
The symptoms may or may
not be related to
meals. There may be nausea with or without vomiting and
early satiety (a
sense of fullness after eating only a small amount of
food).
The study of functional disorders of the
gastrointestinal tract often is categorized
by the organ of
involvement. Thus, there are functional disorders of
the esophagus,
stomach, small intestine, colon, and gallbladder. The
amount of research
on functional disorders has been focused mostly on the
esophagus and stomach (such as dyspepsia), perhaps
because these organs are easiest to reach
and study.
Research into functional disorders affecting the small
intestine and colon (for
example, IBS) is more difficult to conduct and there is
less agreement among the
research studies. This probably is a reflection of the
complexity of the activities of
the small intestine and colon and the difficulty
in studying these activities.
Functional diseases of the gallbladder, like those
of the small intestine and colon,
also are more difficult to study.
Most
individuals are surprised
to learn they are not alone with symptoms of IBS.
In fact, irritable
bowel syndrome (IBS) affects approximately 10-20% of the
general population.
It is the most common disease diagnosed by
gastroenterologists (doctors who specialize in medical
treatment of disorders of the stomach and
intestines) and one of the
most common disorders seen by primary care
physicians.
Sometimes irritable
bowel syndrome is referred to as spastic
colon, mucous colitis,
spastic colitis, nervous stomach, or irritable
colon.
Irritable bowel
syndrome, or IBS, is generally classified as a
"functional" disorder. A
functional disorder refers to a disorder or
disease where the
primary abnormality is an altered physiological function
(the way the body
works), rather than an identifiable structural or
biochemical cause. It characterizes a disorder that generally
can not be diagnosed in a traditional way; that is, as an inflammatory,
infectious, or structural abnormality that can
be seen by commonly used
examination, x-ray, or blood
test.
Irritable bowel
syndrome is understood as a multi-faceted
disorder. In people
with IBS, symptoms result from what appears to be a
disturbance in the interaction between the gut or
intestines, the brain, and the autonomic nervous
system that alters
regulation of bowel motility (motor function) or
sensory function.
Irritable bowel
syndrome is characterized by a group of
symptoms in which abdominal
pain or discomfort is associated with a change in
bowel pattern, such as
loose or more frequent bowel movements, diarrhea,
and/or constipation.
Treatment options are
available to manage IBS—whether symptoms are mild, moderate, or
severe.
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