Publication | Open Access
Increased risk of irritable bowel syndrome after bacterial gastroenteritis: cohort study
373
Citations
4
References
1999
Year
Functional Gastrointestinal DisorderBowel Dysfunction 1YearClinical EpidemiologyGastroenterologyBacterial GastroenteritisTraveler DiarrheaIrritable Bowel SyndromeCohort StudyGastrointestinal PathologyClinical GastroenterologyInfection ControlPublic HealthMedicineFirst EpisodeClinical MicrobiologyGastric DisordersEpidemiologyDigestive System Diseases
Evidence exists of an increased risk of irritable bowel syndrome after an episode of bacterial gastroenteritis. 1 2 In one study, 12out of 38patients presented with bowel dysfunction 1year after salmonella gastroenteritis.1 In another study, 386patients with bacterial gastroenteritis were surveyed by questionnaire 6months after infection, and 27(7%) had developed irritable bowel syndrome.2 Both studies, however, lacked a control group.3 Our source population came from the General Practice Research Database, which contains clinicalinformation on patients recorded by general practitioners in the United Kingdom.4 We identified patients aged 25to 74with a bacteriologically confirmed first episode of gastroenteritis, from a recent study that examined the association between acid suppressing drugs and the development of gastroenteritis.5 We excluded all patients with a history of irritable bowel syndrome, cancer, or alcoholism. We sampled a comparison cohort from the source population from which patients …
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