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Irritable Bowel Syndrome Health Article

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Definition

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a common gastrointestinal condition characterized by abdominal pain and cramps; changes in bowel movements (diarrhea, constipation, or both); gassiness; bloating; nausea; and other symptoms. There is no cure for IBS; however, dietary changes, stress management, and sometimes medications are often able to eliminate or substantially reduce its symptoms.

Description

IBS is the name people use today for a condition that was once called—among other things—spastic colitis, mucous colitis, spastic colon, nervous colon, spastic bowel, and functional bowel disorder. Some of these names reflected the now outdated belief that IBS is a purely psychological disorder, a product of the patient's imagination. Although modern medicine recognizes that stress, anxiety and depression can trigger IBS attacks, medical specialists agree that IBS is a genuine physical disorder—or group of disorders—with specific identifiable characteristics. IBS is considered a functional disorder because it is thought to result from changes in the activity of the major part of the large intestine (the colon).

Demographics

IBS is one of the most common functional gastrointestinal disorders, affecting 10-20 percent of adults in the United States. Research has demonstrated that symptoms compatible with IBS are about as common in school-age children as in adults. IBS normally makes its first appearance during young adulthood, and symptoms usually begin at about age 20. Women with IBS represent over 70 percent of IBS sufferers. IBS is responsible for more time lost from school and work than any medical problem—other than the common cold. It accounts for a substantial proportion of the patients seen by specialists in diseases of the digestive system (gastroenterologists).

A community-based study of 507 middle school and high school students by Hyams, et al, found that 6-14 percent of the adolescent population had IBS symptoms. Anxiety and depression scores were significantly higher for this group. Eight percent of all the students in the study had seen a physician for abdominal pain in the previous year.

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Author Info: Howard Baker, Thomson Gale, Gale, Detroit, Gale Encyclopedia of Children's Health, 2006
 
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