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Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
Higher prevalence of irritable bowel syndrome and greater gastrointestinal symptoms in obsessive-compulsive disorder
by Jasmine Turna et al
Journal of Psychiatric Research
November 2019

Background: Anxiety and mood symptoms often co-occur with gastrointestinal problems, such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). The extent to which these relate to Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) is unclear, despite anxiety being a prominent symptom of this disorder. The purpose of this analysis was to examine gastrointestinal symptoms in unmedicated, non-depressed adult OCD patients compared to age- and sex-matched community controls.

Methods: Twenty-one OCD patients and 22 controls were recruited from the community (Hamilton, ON, Canada) and enrolled in this cross-sectional study. In addition to a standardized psychiatric assessment, participants completed clinician- and self-rated psychiatric and gastrointestinal symptom severity measures. Presence of IBS was assessed using Rome III criteria.

Results: Gastrointestinal symptom severity (GSRS total; OCD = 8.67 ± 6.72 vs. controls = 2.32 ± 2.12) and prevalence of IBS (OCD = 47.6%; Controls = 4.5%) was higher in OCD patients than in controls. A comparison of OCD patients based on IBS status revealed greater depressive symptom severity (total MADRS: 12.60 ± 1.89 vs 6.91 ± 2.77), p < 0.001) among those with IBS.

Conclusions: High prevalence and severity of gastrointestinal symptoms may be an important clinical consideration when treating OCD patients. More specifically, assessment of IBS and gastrointestinal symptoms may be useful when considering pharmacotherapeutic treatments options for patients. Given the high comorbidity noted with IBS, a disorder of the "gut-brain axis", results may suggest a shared pathophysiological mechanism between psychiatric and gastrointestinal disorders which should be explored in future research.
 

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Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
Psychotropics and Gastrointestinal Conditions: Prescribe with the Gut in Mind

There is evidence to suggest that irritable bowel syndrome responds well to antidepressants. IBS-constipation responds better to SSRIs and IBS-diarrhea, TCAs.

There have been numerous randomized controlled trials that have shown that antidepressants are effective in irritable bowel syndrome patients even in the absence of diagnosable psychiatric pathology. So there is some effect—we don’t understand exactly what it is—presumably on the enteric nervous system in which antidepressants are benefiting patients with IBS.
 

Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator
A few weeks ago, I went to the doctor for IBS. My labwork showed I was a little vitamin D deficient. Though there may have been other factors at play (change in diet, exercise), my IBS went away within days of taking over-the-counter vitamin D supplements.

Similarly:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4412886/

Our study shows that vitamin D deficiency is highly prevalent in patients with IBS and these results seem to have therapeutic implications. Vitamin D supplementation could play a therapeutic role in the control of IBS.

Vitamin D is also linked to better outcomes in preventing transmission of COVID-19.

So correcting a vitamin D deficiency can both help treat IBS and boost the immune system.
 
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Daniel E.

daniel@psychlinks.ca
Administrator

Interestingly, gut microbiota, which regulate and are involved in maintaining immune homeostasis, have also been found to be altered in adult OCD patients. This has led to investigation of probiotics, which may help normalize the gut microbiota as a possible treatment modality. Animal studies have shown that probiotics may confer a benefit in obsessive-compulsive-like behavior, while clinical trials in humans are still ongoing.
 
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