View clinical trials related to Irritable Bowel Syndrome.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to find out the relationship between the bile acids, fatty acids (fatty acids are part of the diet) and bacteria that are present in the intestines.
In this study, the investigators aim to assess the effect of acute FODMAP infusion on gastric motility and on gastrointestinal and psychological symptoms. 20 healthy volunteers and 20 patients with irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) will undergo respectively four and two/three pressure measurements of the stomach after an overnight fast as a measure for gastric motility. During this pressure measurement, which takes approximately 4 hours, one of four FODMAP or control solutions will be administered directly into the stomach through a nasogastric tube. Administration will be stopped when the participant is fully satiated. The four solutions that will be tested in healthy volunteers are (1) a fructan solution, (2) a fructose solution, (3) a FODMAP mix and (4) a glucose solution as a control. In IBS patients, only the fructan and glucose solution will be tested, where after they can choose to come for a third visit to test the fructose solution. The solutions will be tested on separate occasions in a randomized order. During the pressure measurement, participants will be asked to complete several questionnaires: (1) a gastrointestinal symptom questionnaire to assess their gastrointestinal symptoms, (2) a satiation questionnaire during infusion of one of the solutions, (3) psychological questionnaires (POMS, SAM, PANAS and STAI) to evaluate possible psychological effects of FODMAP infusion. The investigators hypothesize that there will be differences in gastric motility between healthy volunteers and IBS patients. Furthermore, it is hypothesized that gastrointestinal symptoms will be increased in IBS patients, and that FODMAP infusion will have more psychological effects in patients than in healthy volunteers.
The aim of the present study is to assess the efficacy of traditionally fermented sauerkraut in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome.
Irritable Bowel Syndrome is a common disease to which there is no curable treatment. Diet is considered to trigger symptoms associated with the clinical picture of IBS, and dietary treatment is thus believed to relieve the symptoms of IBS. As the disease is very heterogeneous in its manifestation, different treatment options might be indicated depending on the predominant symptom. To investigate the response to different dietary treatment options, a randomized controlled intervention trial will be carried out in adult patients (>18 y) with IBS according to Rome IV criteria. The aim of this study is to compare the response to two different dietary treatments or optimized medical treatment.
This study will evaluate the efficacy and safety of eluxadoline 100 milligrams (mg) twice a day (BID) versus placebo for the treatment of patients with Irritable Bowel Syndrome with Diarrhea (IBS-D) who report that the use of loperamide in the prior 12 months failed to provide control of their IBS-D symptoms.
The primary objective of this study is to estimate the overall prevalence of IBS medically diagnosed and diagnosed using Rome III or IV criteria in GI adult outpatients in China.
Many patients with endometriosis experience extra genital and abdominal symptoms as a major part of their problem. This includes gastrointestinal dysfunction with pain, urinary symptoms compatible with interstitial cystitis and gastrointestinal symptoms resembling the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Such problems may be secondary to changes in autonomous neuronal structure and function elicited by the endometriotic elements, which may cause a "visceral syndrome" with the above mentioned symptoms. The investigators hypothesize that dietary treatment will improve the experience of gastrointestinal symptoms, pain and quality of life in patients with endometriosis-related irritable bowel syndrome. The aim of this first randomized, placebo controlled pilot study investigating patients with both endometriosis and IBS, is to test the application of a low FODMAP diet and a placebo diet for endometriosis-related IBS-like symptoms in order to stablish a platform for a randomized controlled study. Thus, the primary aim of this pilot study is to investigate the applicability of a placebo diet in patients with endometriosis and to investigate the compliance in both intervention group and control group. In addition, the aim is to investigate whether the participants find the diet manageable and whether they are able to identify the placebo diet.
The proposed study will primarily demonstrate the efficacy of kiwifruit as a food intervention for the relief of constipation and associated symptoms in functionally constipated adults, and those with IBS-C. Secondary measures will show the consumption of kiwifruit will result in improvements in gastro-intestinal discomfort levels of adults with IBS-C.
Reliable patient reported outcome measures (PROM's) for symptom assessment in irritable bowel syndrome are essential in order to investigate natural disease course and potential treatment options aimed at symptom improvement, since biological markers are currently unavailable. Currently used symptom assessment methods, i.e. end-of-day or end-of-week questionnaires, have considerable limitations. The Experience Sampling Method (ESM), an electronic questioning method characterized by random and repeated, momentary assessments in the subject's current state and environment, might overcome these limitations. Aim of this study is to validate an IBS-specific electronic patient-reported outcome measure, based on the Experience Sampling Method-principle, for symptom assessment in IBS.
The primary scientific objective of the study entails examining whether altered endogenous pain inhibition is present in children with functional abdominal pain (FAP) and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) compared with healthy controls (Part 1). A secondary objective implies examining whether pediatric pain neuroscience education (PNE) is able to improve pain catastrophizing, pain-related fear, pain intensity (including symptoms and indices of central sensitization) and pain-related functional disability in children with FAP or IBS (Part 2).