Cognitive and behavioural differences between subtypes in refractory irritable bowel syndrome
Cognitive and behavioural differences between subtypes in refractory irritable bowel syndrome
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional gastrointestinal syndrome consisting of different bowel pattern subtypes: diarrhea predominant (IBS-D), constipation predominant (IBS-C), and alternating (IBS-A). This paper aimed to identify whether (a) psychological factors implicated in the cognitive behavioral model of IBS were differentially associated with bowel pattern subtypes, (b) whether there were differences in symptom severity and work and social adjustment across the IBS-subtypes. Analysis was conducted on baseline data of 557 individuals with refractory IBS recruited into the Assessing Cognitive Therapy in Irritable Bowel (ACTIB) randomized controlled trial. Correlations assessed the associations between psychological factors, stool patterns, symptom severity, and work and social adjustment. Hierarchical regressions identified whether cognitive and behavioral factors were significantly associated with frequency of loose/watery stools, hard/lumpy stools and symptom severity while controlling for affective (anxiety and depression) and demographic factors (age, gender, symptom duration). One-way ANOVAs were conducted to assess differences across Rome III classified subtypes (IBS-A, D and C) in cognitive, behavioral, affective, symptom severity, and adjustment measures. Psychological factors were significantly associated with symptom severity and work and social adjustment. Increased avoidance behavior and unhelpful gastrointestinal (GI) cognitions were significantly associated with higher frequency of loose/watery stools. Increased control behaviors were associated with higher frequency of hard/lumpy stools. Cognitive and behavioral differences were significant across the Rome III classified IBS subtypes. There were no differences in anxiety, depression, overall symptom severity, or work and social adjustment. The results are discussed in terms of their utility in tailoring cognitive behavioral treatments to IBS subtypes.
behaviors, IBS, subtypes, unhelpful cognitions
594-607
Windgassen, Sula
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Moss-Morris, Rona
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Everitt, Hazel
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Sibelli, Alice
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Goldsmith, Kimberley
081d71e5-c45d-4feb-bb76-4d4566005bb9
Chalder, Trudie
cb09653b-2c1e-4dfc-bb13-c6e8ca918602
1 May 2019
Windgassen, Sula
6fc97726-5e05-489a-b88d-05de32332b33
Moss-Morris, Rona
a502f58a-d319-49a6-8aea-9dde4efc871e
Everitt, Hazel
80b9452f-9632-45a8-b017-ceeeee6971ef
Sibelli, Alice
64b9c97c-3cf9-4915-8af0-c40b7805a8f1
Goldsmith, Kimberley
081d71e5-c45d-4feb-bb76-4d4566005bb9
Chalder, Trudie
cb09653b-2c1e-4dfc-bb13-c6e8ca918602
Windgassen, Sula, Moss-Morris, Rona, Everitt, Hazel, Sibelli, Alice, Goldsmith, Kimberley and Chalder, Trudie
(2019)
Cognitive and behavioural differences between subtypes in refractory irritable bowel syndrome.
Behavior Therapy, 50 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.beth.2018.09.006).
Abstract
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a functional gastrointestinal syndrome consisting of different bowel pattern subtypes: diarrhea predominant (IBS-D), constipation predominant (IBS-C), and alternating (IBS-A). This paper aimed to identify whether (a) psychological factors implicated in the cognitive behavioral model of IBS were differentially associated with bowel pattern subtypes, (b) whether there were differences in symptom severity and work and social adjustment across the IBS-subtypes. Analysis was conducted on baseline data of 557 individuals with refractory IBS recruited into the Assessing Cognitive Therapy in Irritable Bowel (ACTIB) randomized controlled trial. Correlations assessed the associations between psychological factors, stool patterns, symptom severity, and work and social adjustment. Hierarchical regressions identified whether cognitive and behavioral factors were significantly associated with frequency of loose/watery stools, hard/lumpy stools and symptom severity while controlling for affective (anxiety and depression) and demographic factors (age, gender, symptom duration). One-way ANOVAs were conducted to assess differences across Rome III classified subtypes (IBS-A, D and C) in cognitive, behavioral, affective, symptom severity, and adjustment measures. Psychological factors were significantly associated with symptom severity and work and social adjustment. Increased avoidance behavior and unhelpful gastrointestinal (GI) cognitions were significantly associated with higher frequency of loose/watery stools. Increased control behaviors were associated with higher frequency of hard/lumpy stools. Cognitive and behavioral differences were significant across the Rome III classified IBS subtypes. There were no differences in anxiety, depression, overall symptom severity, or work and social adjustment. The results are discussed in terms of their utility in tailoring cognitive behavioral treatments to IBS subtypes.
Text
Windgassen paper IBS subtype 2018
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
Sula IBS subtype paper 2018
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 17 September 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 21 September 2018
Published date: 1 May 2019
Keywords:
behaviors, IBS, subtypes, unhelpful cognitions
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 424202
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/424202
ISSN: 0005-7894
PURE UUID: c552e96a-2a01-4294-8d9d-100a376b9bcd
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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2018 11:34
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:04
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Contributors
Author:
Sula Windgassen
Author:
Rona Moss-Morris
Author:
Alice Sibelli
Author:
Kimberley Goldsmith
Author:
Trudie Chalder
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