Inflammatory bowel disease is often confused with the
non-inflammatory condition irritable bowel syndrome (IBS).
IBD and IBS are distinctly different conditions. Still, a
person who has been diagnosed with one may display symptoms
of the other. It’s also important to know that one can have
both conditions at the same time. Both are considered
chronic conditions. Although both conditions can occur in
anyone at any age, they seem to run in families.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a term for a group of
disorders characterized by prolonged inflammation in various
parts of the digestive tract. The most common form of IBD is
ulcerative colitis. Another form is named as Crohn’s
disease. Whereas Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic
functional disorder of the gastrointestinal tract,
characterized by chronic abdominal pain and altered bowel
habits. People with IBS show no clinical signs of a disease
and often have normal test results. Depending on the main
symptoms, people with IBS can be diagnosed as IBS with
constipation (IBS-C), IBS with diarrhea (IBS-D) and
IBS-mixed (IBS-M). Many of the symptoms for these conditions
overlap, which sometimes makes diagnosis complex. IBS is
characterized by a combination of abdominal pain and cramps
constipation and bloating, sometimes diarrhea, bacterial
overgrowth in the small intestine and a feeling of
incomplete evacuation. IBD can cause the same symptoms as
IBS, as well as extreme fatigue, intestinal scarring, joint
pain, malnutrition, rectal bleeding and weight loss.
Abdominal pain is the most common symptom reported in IBS.
Research shows 3 out of 4 people with IBS report either
continuous or frequent abdominal pain. The pain is most
often felt in the lower abdomen, though it can occur
anywhere in the abdomen. The type and severity of pain can
vary, even within a single day. Pain associated with IBS
includes both visceral pain and functional pain.
Abdominal pain is also a common symptom of IBD. The Crohn’s
& Colitis Foundation estimates that 50 to 70 percent of
people with IBD report gastrointestinal (GI) pain when their
IBD symptoms first began and, later, whenever the disease is
active. Diagnoses of IBS and IBD are very different. IBD is
diagnosed through a variety of tests, whereas IBS is
diagnosed largely by exclusion, or ruling out other diseases
and conditions. IBS diagnosis is usually made on the basis
of medical history, family history, physical exam, symptom
report and ruling out other conditions. Diagnosis of IBD,
unlike IBS, will require medical tests like stool studies,
blood tests, biopsy, X-ray, MRI scan and sometimes barium
contrast study. The exact causes of IBS and IBD are still
the subject of clinical study. Genetics and family history
are thought to play a part in both. Stress is known to make
all GI disorders feel worse. There is a lot of truth when it
is described a reaction as gut-wrenching. In fact, stress
can have a lot of very real effects on the body. Both IBS
and IBD can lead to complications, especially if left
untreated. These conditions affect not only the digestive
system but mental health as well. IBD and IBS may seem to
share similar symptoms, but they are two different
conditions with very different treatment requirements. With
IBD, the goal is to reduce inflammation that causes
symptoms. IBS, on the other hand, may not be treatable with
medications because there’s not an identifiable bodily
cause. |