In recent years, some IBS sufferers have found relief through hypnotherapy or an elimination diet, two treatments that work better than traditionally prescribed medicine from some sufferers.
Psychological stress, though probably not a direct cause of IBS, often increases the symptoms. Therefore, according to a doctor, if the mind can have such a powerful negative effect on the intestinal tract, it may follow that the mind could be used to achieve a positive, calming effect on the intestines. Clinical hypnosis does just with a success rate of 70 to 95 percent in IBS patients. Clinicians use hypnosis treatment to induce a mental state where the mind is "unusually narrowly and intensely focused and receptive. While the patient is under hypnosis, the clinician uses verbal suggestions and imagery to affect the persons physical and mental functioning. Since the first controlled trial of hypnotherapy in IBS by group nearly 20 years ago, study after study has shown its effectiveness for easing the symptoms of IBS sufferers. In the largest study to date, involving 250 IBS patients, researchers at the University Hospital of South Manchester concluded that hypnotherapy improves symptoms of IBS (eg. diarrhea, constipation and abdominal pain), quality of life and other symptoms, such as nausea, lethargy, backache and urinary problems. Even better, the effects of hypnosis treatment are long-lasting. After a period of between one and five years, 83 percent of responders remained well, and 59 percent required no further medication.
Hypnosis treatment (which typically consists of seven to 12 one-hour sessions) costs an average of $100 a session. However, according to a doctor, the sustained benefit after treatment is calculated to be cost-effective within two years, as patient take less time off from work and consult less often with medical professionals. Furthermore, some major insurance companies will cover the cost of hypnosis treatment, often under the mental-health portion of the plan. A consultant for the American Society of Clinical Hypnotherapy (ASCH) for 10 years occasionally uses hypnotherapy on his adolescent patients. He is a clinical professor of pediatrics and adolescent medicine at the University of Hawaii School of Medicine. Between the ages of 15 and 35, at least half the things people come to doctors for are not necessarily physical ailments. They can often be treated by changing their points of view or altering the way they handle situations. A doctor who has taught 7-year-olds to use imagery and hypnosis to manage, headaches and stomachaches, says that hypnosis helps sufferers of IBS overcome their symptoms through imagery and suggestion by modifying their perceptions and their ways of dealing with the associated problems.
He is not convinced any medication does a great job. But some physical symptoms of IBS can be alleviated such as gas or constipation. He recommends a shotgun approach to treating IBS, implementing dietary changes and medication at the same time the patient undergoes hypnosis. Hypnosis should not be considered an alternative to medication, but rather a complementary or adjunctive treatment.
He says there is every reason to expect that medicine and hypnosis combined given IBS sufferers greater therapeutic benefits than either treatment alone. Keeping in line with shotgun approach to IBS, even when patients do improve, conventional approaches to treatment should not necessarily be ignored. It is still important that lifestyle factors such as diet are aso taken into account. For some people, an elimination diet may prove most effective.
The diet sounds simple enough, but cautions that patients should be realistic in their expectations. The diet takes significant effort. Theres a therapeutic phase and a maintenance phase. In the therapeutic phase, the IBS patient will begin the diet and spend a couple of weeks avoiding foods that may cause symptoms. In the maintenance phase, patients start to determine how much of the offending foods they can tolerate by adding foods back into their diet. There will even be times when a person can go off the diet. They dont expect people to never have sugar or coffee again, but if it causes symptoms, it reinforces that IBS is responsive to the elimination diet and that the effort is worthwhile. Success while on elimination diet is a huge milestone for many people who suffer from IBS. Before beginning a trial diet, you discuss it with your family to gain their support, you will need help staying on your diet and keeping foods that you shouldnt be eating of the house for a while. Furthermore, dont begin the diet during a holiday season be more realistic and wait until a time when pies and stuffing arent accosting you at every corner. Finally, keep a diary or symptom inventory for at least three days before beginning the diet. You can use the diary while you follow the diet. You can use the diary to document what you eat and record whether symptoms arise afterward.
When patient first started the elimination diet, he had the most difficulty eliminating wheat. Instead of bringing a sandwich for lunch, he brought just the chicken. He made other sacrifices as well. He found a coffee substitute and used a soy creamer. His typical morning bowl of high fiber cereal with milk became Cheerios with soymilk. For patient, the elimination diet has made a huge difference in his quality of life; now he rarely experiences the pain in his side that used to last from a week to 10 days.
Since the cause of IBS remains unclear, its a mystery exactly how hypnosis has such a positive influence over the disorder, and even with four studies completed on the issue; researchers continue to come up empty-handed form the standpoint of a precise explanation. Two of the four studies were conducted by group. The first study sought to understand how hypnosis treatment affected the intestinal tract. Seventeen of the 18 patients experienced marked improvement of IBS symptoms following the hypnosis treatment; however, researchers were unable to detect any significant changes in pain sensitivity or muscle tone in the gut. The second study examined changes in the central nervous system during the hypnotherapy that might explain the success of the treatment for IBS. In this study, 21 of the 24 patients experienced significant improvement in their IBS symptoms, but no related changes in the central nervous system could be detected with the testing methods used.