An overgrowth of bacteria in the gut has been
definitively linked to Irritable Bowel Syndrome in the results of a new
Cedars-Sinai study which used cultures from the small intestine.
This is
the first study to use this "gold standard" method of connecting
bacteria to the cause of the disease that affects an estimated 30 million
people in the United States.
Previous
studies have indicated that bacteria play a role in the disease, including
breath tests detecting methane –
a byproduct of bacterial fermentation in the gut. This study was the first to
make the link using bacterial cultures.
The
study, in the current issue of Digestive Diseases and Sciences,
examined samples of patients' small bowel cultures to confirm the presence of
small intestinal bacterial overgrowth – or SIBO – in more than 320 subjects. In
patients with IBS, more than a third also were diagnosed with small intestine bacterial
overgrowth, compared to fewer than 10 percent of those without the disorder. Of
those with diarrhea-predominant IBS, 60 percent also had bacterial overgrowth.
"While
we found compelling evidence in the past that bacterial overgrowth is a
contributing cause of IBS, making this link through bacterial cultures is the
gold standard of diagnosis," said Mark Pimentel, MD, director of the
Cedars-Sinai GI Motility Program and an author of the study. "This clear
evidence of the role bacteria play in the disease underscores our clinical
trial findings, which show that antibiotics are a successful treatment for
IBS."
IBS is
the most common gastrointestinal disorder in the U.S., affecting an estimated
30 million people.
Patients
with this condition suffer symptoms that can include painful bloating,
constipation, diarrhea or an alternating pattern of both. Many patients try to
avoid social interactions because they are embarrassed by their symptoms.
Pimentel has led clinical trials that have shown rifaximin, a targeted
antibiotic absorbed only in the gut, is an effective treatment for patients
with IBS.
"In
the past, treatments for IBS have always focused on trying to alleviate the
symptoms," said Pimentel, who first bucked standard medical thought more
than a decade ago when he suggested bacteria played a significant role in the
disease. "Patients who
take rifaximin experience relief of their symptoms even after they stop taking
the medication. This new study confirms what our findings with the antibiotic
and our previous studies always led us to believe: Bacteria are key
contributors to the cause of IBS."
Provided
by Cedars-Sinai
Medical Center
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