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The role of stress in symptom exacerbation among IBS patients
Authors:Blanchard Edward B  Lackner Jeffrey M  Jaccard James  Rowell Dianna  Carosella Ann Marie  Powell Catherine  Sanders Kathryn  Krasner Susan  Kuhn Eric
Affiliation:Center for Stress and Anxiety Disorders, University at Albany-SUNY, Albany, NY, USA. ceblanchard@earthlink.net
Abstract:Over 200 treatment-seeking irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients completed 4 weeks of daily prospective measures of stress and gastrointestinal symptoms as well as retrospective measures of stress (life events over 12 months, hassles over 1 month). We also obtained the stress measures on 66 nonill controls. Irritable bowel syndrome patients report more frequent hassles than controls and a greater stress impact than controls. Using structural equation modeling, we found that the data were consistent with a model of robust autocorrelation effects of both week-to-week gastrointestinal (GI) symptom indices (r=.84) and stress indices (r=.73), as well as strong concurrent effects of stress on IBS symptoms (r=.90) and vice versa (r=.41). The data also were consistent with a model where there were effects of stress in Week t upon GI symptoms in Week t+1 and t+2, but they were mediated through the concurrent week effects and/or autocorrelation effects. There were no statistically significant independent pathways from stress in Week t to GI symptoms in Week t+1 or t+2. Thus, there is more support for a reciprocal relation between stress and symptoms than there is for a causal relation.
Keywords:Irritable bowel syndrome   Stress   Stress and irritable bowel syndrome
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