AI Article Synopsis

  • Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a complex gut-brain interaction disorder affecting many people, and treatment outcomes vary widely among individuals, prompting interest in multidisciplinary approaches that address multiple aspects of the condition.
  • A review of literature highlighted that while multidisciplinary care generally showed significant improvement in IBS symptoms, dietary treatments yielded mixed results; specifically, a low FODMAP diet was effective, whereas other diets like gluten-free had inconsistent evidence.
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy and gut-directed hypnotherapy were found to be effective, yet there's a need for more research on the combinations of therapies in multidisciplinary care settings for better management of IBS.

Article Abstract

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a complex disorder of gut-brain interaction (DGBI) that is thought to affect a significant proportion of the population. As a result of the nature of IBS, it is hard to predict treatment efficacy as all individuals respond differently, and thus multidisciplinary treatment has become increasingly of interest as it targets multiple aspects of IBS at the same time. Here, we aim to review the literature of both multidisciplinary and single-discipline therapy for IBS. Ovid MEDLINE was utilised with a systematic search to find relevant randomised controlled trials. The population included adults with a Rome diagnosis of IBS and an intervention that was either multidisciplinary care, diet, psychotherapy, gut-directed hypnotherapy (GDH) or physiotherapy. Multidisciplinary care studies found an overall significant improvement, while dietary treatment was varied. A low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols diet was the only one to improve symptoms, while gluten-free and fibre diets had mixed evidence for their efficacy. Novel diets, including a tritordeum-based diet and low tryptophan diet, significantly improved symptoms. Cognitive behavioural therapy was found to be efficacious when compared to controls, as was psychoeducation. GDH was also found to be efficacious, but 83.3% of studies examined a refractory IBS population. There is a lack of literature looking at how multidisciplinary care and different combinations of disciplines work to treat those with IBS in secondary care. Further studies are required for a greater understanding of how multidisciplinary care may be utilised to better manage IBS.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.16586DOI Listing

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