The functional gastrointestinal disorders and the Rome II process.
نویسنده
چکیده
Toward a new understanding of the functional gastrointestinal disorders For centuries, physicians and historians have recognized that it is common for maladies to aZict the intestinal tract, producing symptoms of pain, nausea, vomiting, bloating, diarrhea, constipation, diYcult passage of food or feces, or any combination. When these symptoms are experienced as severe, or when they impact on daily life, those aZicted often attribute the symptoms to an illness and seek medical care. Traditionally, the physicians caring for these patients will search for inflammatory, infectious, neoplastic, and other structural abnormalities to make a specific diagnosis and oVer specific treatment. Yet as has been common in medical practice, when no structural etiology is found, the patient is diagnosed as having “functional” symptoms and is treated symptomatically. Until recently, the limited scientific knowledge about the pathophysiology of these symptoms, and the need to diagnose by excluding “organic” disease, has led physicians to feel uncertain about the legitimacy of these symptoms as bona fide disorders. Some have felt insecure in their ability to manage patients with these conditions, and might even avoid caring for patients with these complaints. But over the past two decades, two important processes have occurred to legitimize these conditions, and to increase attention toward the research and clinical care of patients with functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGID). The first has been a shift in conceptualizing these disorders from a disease-based, reductionistic model, where the eVort is directed toward identifying a single underlying biological etiology, to a more integrated, biopsychosocial model of illness. 5 The latter model allows for symptoms to be understood as physiologically multidetermined (e.g., altered motility, enhanced visceral sensitivity, brain–gut dysregulation) and as modifiable by sociocultural and psychosocial influences. The second change has been the remarkable growth in investigative techniques that support this newer conceptualization of brain–gut interactions: improved motility assessment, the development of the barostat, imaging of the brain (positron emission tomography (PET), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)), standardized psychological diagnostic instruments, and the molecular investigation of brain–gut peptides. As a result, over the past two decades, there has been a 10-fold increment in Medline citations about irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), a much larger number of symposia and presentations at national and international meetings about the FGIDs, and increased eVort by pharmaceutical companies to identify and test receptoractive agents to treat these disorders. These developments built support for an international eVort to characterize and classify the FGIDs by investigators and clinicians, pharmaceutical regulatory organizations, pharmaceutical companies, and federal research agencies. The Multinational Working Teams to Develop Diagnostic Criteria for Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders (Rome Committees) began in the mid 1980s as a series of committees that developed consensus criteria for over 20 FGIDs and published them in several documents in Gastroenterology International. These documents were eventually updated and compiled into a book as the Rome criteria. In this supplement, we present the second major eVort of the Rome committees: the update of our growing knowledge of the FGIDs over the past five years. We include five articles that detail the FGIDs based on anatomic region, (esophageal, gastroduodenal, bowel, biliary, anorectal), and a separate article on pediatric FGIDs. We also present several articles summarizing current knowledge on the physiologic (motility/sensation), basic science (brain–gut), and psychosocial aspects of the FGIDs, and provide recommendations for the design of treatment trials for these disorders. In addition, we include the revised (Rome II) diagnostic criteria for the FGIDs developed by consensus of experts and based on existing evidence. Finally, as we enter the new millennium, we offer recommendations for future studies that will help advance this growing field. In this introductory article, I will review the rationale and limitations of a symptom-based diagnostic (Rome II) classification system, discuss the process through which the criteria and consensus information were developed, and briefly summarize the pathophysiological knowledge that is evolving about the FGIDs. More detailed information is provided in the other articles written by the 10 committees.
منابع مشابه
Abdominal pain-related functional gastrointestinal disorders based on Rome III criteria in a pediatric gastroenterology clinic
Background: Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) entail several distinct conditions that collectively account for a sizeable proportion of patients complaining of abdominal pain. Physicians’ awareness is fundamental to avoid unnecessary evaluations and to alleviate stress-related problems. This study aimed to assess the relative frequencies of FGIDs and related categories in a se...
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Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) are a common problem in children. These disorders in children are classified into the following categories according to the ROME III classification: Functional Dyspepsia, Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), Abdominal Migraines, Childhood Functional abdominal pain (FAP), Childhood functional abdominal pain syndrome and functional constipation. FGIDs are ...
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The Rome II pediatric criteria for functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) were defined in 1999 to be used as diagnostic tools and to advance empirical research. In this document, the Rome III Committee aimed to update and revise the pediatric criteria. The decision-making process to define Rome III criteria for children aged 4-18 years consisted of arriving at a consensus based on clinic...
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The publication in the April, 2006 issue of Gastroenterology of Rome III has made available to the scientific world an enhanced and updated version of the Rome criteria and related information on the functional GI disorders. It is expected that the criteria will be adopted and used by physicians, pharmaceuticals and regulatory agencies worldwide, just as the previous Rome II became the standard...
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Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) are common worldwide and cover a wide range of disorders attributable to the gastrointestinal tract that cannot be explained by structural or biochemical abnormalities. The diagnosis of these disorders relies on the symptom-based Rome criteria. In 2016 the Rome criteria were revised for infants/toddlers and for children and adolescents. In this revi...
متن کاملUse of Rome II criteria in childhood defecation disorders: applicability in clinical and research practice.
OBJECTIVES To evaluate the prevalence of pediatric functional gastrointestinal disorders with the use of the Rome II criteria and to compare these data with the classic Iowa criteria. STUDY DESIGN Patients recorded defecation and encopresis frequency. A standard history was taken and a physical examination including a rectal examination was done. The prevalence of both criteria was assessed a...
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عنوان ژورنال:
- Gut
دوره 45 Suppl 2 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 1999