Prospective Evaluation of Autonomic Function and Intestinal Blood Flow in Health and Irritable Bowel Syndrome Shows Differences Limited to Patients With Constipation Predominance.
Yoav Mazor, Margaret M Leach, Michael Jones, Anastasia Ejova, Charles Fisher, David Joffe, Paul Roach, John Kellow, Allison Malcolm
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Autonomic dysfunction may contribute to symptom generation in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), possibly driven by psychological morbidity and activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Previous data are conflicting, perhaps due to lack of accounting for differential bowel patterns in IBS (constipation vs. diarrhea) or by diverse methodologies used to measure autonomic function. Our aim was to determine if autonomic response differed between IBS subtypes and healthy controls.
Methods: Forty female volunteers (20 IBS and 20 healthy) underwent comprehensive autonomic testing, fasting and postprandially, and in response to cold pressor and deep breathing challenges. Pulse transit time (PTT) and ultrasound measurements of intestinal blood flow were used as measures of systemic and local autonomic function, respectively. Outcomes were adjusted for baseline psychological comorbidities and gastric emptying (measured concurrently with scintigraphy).
Key results: Findings, confined to IBS patients with predominant constipation (IBS-C), included (1) lower fasting and a trend to larger postprandial increase in superior mesenteric artery end-diastolic velocity; (2) lower fasting PTT, suggesting higher sympathetic tone, but no difference in postprandial PTT change; and (3) attenuated increase in postprandial aortic peak systolic velocity. Response to systemic autonomic challenges did not differ between IBS and health. Some psychological factors mediated differences between groups in the fasting, but not postprandial, state.
Conclusions and inferences: IBS-C patients display systemic and local autonomic imbalance providing some support for recent therapies aimed at modulating autonomic state specifically in this patient group (e.g., acustimulation).
期刊介绍:
Neurogastroenterology & Motility (NMO) is the official Journal of the European Society of Neurogastroenterology & Motility (ESNM) and the American Neurogastroenterology and Motility Society (ANMS). It is edited by James Galligan, Albert Bredenoord, and Stephen Vanner. The editorial and peer review process is independent of the societies affiliated to the journal and publisher: Neither the ANMS, the ESNM or the Publisher have editorial decision-making power. Whenever these are relevant to the content being considered or published, the editors, journal management committee and editorial board declare their interests and affiliations.