Understanding Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)

What is IBS

IBS is a condition that impacts the intestines, it includes a range of gut symptoms including issues with both motility (the movement of digested food through the intestines) and sensitivity (how the brain interprets signals from the intestinal nerves), resulting in symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, alterations in bowel patterns. Canada has one of the highest rates of IBS in the world, estimated 18% vs 11% globally (Lovell et al. 2012). However, it is thought that IBS often remains under-diagnosed.

There are 3 defined subtypes of IBS

  1. IBS-C: with predominant constipation (Bristol types 1 and 2).
  2. IBS-D: with predominant diarrhea (Bristol types 6 and 7).
  3. IBS-M: with both constipation and diarrhea (Bristol types 1 and 6).

For more information on these subtypes click here.

Tips that can help manage IBS symptoms

Symptom specific strategies to experiment with:

Bloating and gas:

Constipation:

Diarrhea:

Probiotics

Some probiotic supplements can reduce symptoms for some people living with IBS. If you want to try a probiotic supplement, speak with your dietitian to help you choose with one to try. Typically we suggest taking the recommended dose daily for four weeks to see if symptoms improve, if they do not then you should stop. Some people also find benefit in taking fermented products such as kefir.

Summary

So many variables can impact symptoms for people living with IBS, including food and lifestyle triggers like stress. If you do want to experiment with something new we suggest adjusting one variable at a time to understand the impact it has on you.

If you want to explore this topic further please let your Constant Health DIetitian know!

For more information about IBS

CDHF

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