Delhi belly antibiotic could help relieve IBS pain

By Rajan | Thursday, January 6th, 2011

The researchers revealed that antibiotics could tackle the discomfort of irritable bowel syndrome. There is no cure for IBS that affects one in five people about once in their lives. But according to US study the painful condition that causes abdominal discomfort, bloating, diarrhea and constipation, could be relieved by governing antibiotics.

The teams of researchers from the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles make use of a widely used drug known as rifaximin for stomach worries lifted up by the people who travel overseas. In study trail of three months, twelve hundred people suffering from IBS were arbitrarily prescribed rifaximin or a dummy pill.

Among all participants about forty percent those who took the drug reported considerable amount of relief from their symptoms, in comparison to thirty percent who took a dummy pill. The study’s result could strengthen theories that IBS may be commonly caused by bacteria.

For years, the treatment alternatives for IBS sufferers have been tremendously restricted. IBS- irritable bowel syndrome does not react well to treatment available presently like dietary alterations and fibre supplements alone, explained Cedars-Sinai’s Mark Pimentel. With antibiotic treatment, the sufferers feel better and continue to feel better after discontinuing the intake of drug.

This denotes that they did something to smack at the reason of the ailment. The outcomes were greeted by experts in the meadow, though some advocated that antibiotic resistance could develop if rifaximin was widely used added Mark Pimentel, reported the study published in New England Journal of Medicine


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