Secondary symptoms include bloating, abdominal distention, feelings of incomplete evacuation. Sometimes patients experience urgency; they feel like they have to go to the bathroom right away. Finally, about 20 percent of patients with IBS have fecal incontinence and lose control of their bowels.
What causes IBS?
Some research has pointed to people with IBS having a genetic predisposition. Other possible causes could be environment factors that trigger the condition, or medications, viral infections, bacterial infections. Experts have yet to pinpoint the exact cause.
What is wrong with the digestive systems in people with IBS?
Experts used to attribute IBS only to abnormal gut motility – abnormal muscle or nerve movement in the gastrointestinal tract. However, over the last 20 to 30 years, experts have learned that patients with IBS sense things in their gut differently. Their body may interpret normal gut function as abnormal. During the day the gut is in motion – the stomach is growling, mixing, churning and emptying of food in the small intestine and colon. Most people are not affected by those signals, but many patients with IBS seem to feel those signals and find them painful. Also, through studies using MRI and CAT scans of the brain, patients with IBS seem to sense pain in the brains differently.