IBS  Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Overcoming Irritable Bowel Syndrome with Hypnosis

1. Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) and Hypnosis

Conventional medical treatment alone has been inadequate in alleviating IBS symptoms for millions of people. However, hypnotherapy combined with conventional medical treatment produces dramatic symptom reduction and alleviation.

Facts on Irritable Bowel Syndrome

• It is also known as spastic colon, colitis, nervous stomach, etc.
• IBS affects 15-20 % of the population
• IBS is present in one of of three women
• IBS is present if 40% of Fibromyalgia patients
• IBS is the second most common cited reason for missed work days
• IBS only responds to conventional treatments 25% of the time
• IBS responds 94% of the time to hypnotherapy

To read an informative article on IBS by Dr. Melissa Roth, click here.

Reasons to consider hypnotherapy for IBS

• Hypnotherapy is not a substitute for, but an adjunct to, conventional medical and psychological treatment.
• One-third of American adults spend a total of $13.7 billion on break-away treatments.
Hypnotherapy is complimentary medicine appropriate for some symptoms that haven't responded to conventional treatment.
Viruses, germs and physical trauma are not the only considerations in patient treatment. Mind/body interactions, environment and lifestyle all play roles.

• No one disputes that the mind and body are closely linked. The connection between stress and disease is well documented.

• All hypnosis is really self-hypnosis, so there is never a loss of control. You are alert and in full control. You will hear every word.

• Any time willpower and imagination come into conflict, imagination will always win. That's why willpower is not required to achieve results with hypnosis.

 

Irritable Bowel Syndrome

IBS is a frustrating and often debilitating chronic illness characterized by diarrhea, constipation, abdominal pain, bloating and spasms. Conventional medical treatment includes a variety of medications, a high fiber diet, fiber supplements and behavioral changes. The behavioral changes include exercise, stress reduction and dietary changes. Unfortunately, this regime has not been proven adequately effective for a high percentage of sufferers. In addition, many people find the side effects of the medications to be more noxious than the IBS Symptoms. Either reason results in poor compliance.

However, Hypnotherapy has been proven highly effective in alleviating IBS symptoms. Over 15 years of solid scientific research has demonstrated Hypnotherapy as an effective, safe and inexpensive choice for IBS symptom alleviation. Hypnotherapy routinely produces positive results in over 80% of the people who use it. It has been so overwhelmingly successful for IBS symptom alleviation that Adriane Fugh-Berman, MD, chair of the National Women's Health Network in Washington, DC, says that Hypnosis should be the treatment of choice for IBS cases which have not responded to conventional therapy. In the UK Hypnotherapy is often the first plan of action before medications.

Typically during Hypnotherapy for IBS, clients have experienced the following:
93.7% have a reduction of symptoms.
86% have become symptom free within the course of therapy.

IBS Graph

This is a program done in conjunction with your personal physician and is not intended as a replacement for traditional medical treatment. Conventional medical treatment has been inadequate in alleviating IBS symptoms for most people. However, Hypnotherapy combined with traditional medical treatment can provide dramatic relief for most sufferers. Most clients, with the help of their personal physicians, have been able to reduce or eliminate most of the medications they were taking for IBS symptoms.


There are two distinct therapies for IBS. The first is for people who suffer from IBS only when a specific event is going on. For example not having access to bathrooms can cause anxiety that will trigger the symptoms. This can almost fall in to a category of a phobia that causes the symptoms to manifest. This therapy is more focused on Anxiety and the time between appointments is scheduled differently. The second is for people who suffer the symptoms day to day. These people experience the IBS cycle from good days to bad days with events not effecting it. Many of the people who have IBS also have Fibromyalgia
. Your insurance may cover this therapy. Before selecting a Hypnotherapist for IBS, be sure they have the proper training. This therapy requires additional certifications not provided in Standard training.

If you have any questions on this feel free to
 contact me for a
free confidential phone consultation.  850-515-0514

 

 

Our program consists of six to twelve private sessions which are scheduled two weeks apart. Clients are given a cd of each session to use at home.  (850-515-0514) or hypnotherapyctr@aol.com

Cost of Six Session program 500.00

Cost of Twelve Session Program 900.00

Disclaimer
 
This is a treatment program designed to be used in conjunction with your physician/s and is not intended as a replacement for conventional medical diagnosis and treatment.
 

Irritable Bowel Syndrome And Hypnosis

By Melissa J. Roth, Cht, DCH(c)

Irritable Bowel Syndrome, also known as spastic colon, colitis, or nervous stomach, is a baffling and complex set of gastrointestinal symptoms that affects 15% to 20% of the population (approximately 20 million people). It is characterized by intermittent abdominal cramping, constipation, diarrhea, a combination of both constipation and diarrhea, pain and bloating. Some IBS patients report having both constipation and diarrhea in the same day. Two thirds of the patients are women. It is the second most cited reason for missed work days. It accounts for approximately half of all visits to gastroenterologists.

The causes of IBS are unknown. A diagnosis of IBS is actually a diagnosis of exclusion--you rule out everything else. Since IBS symptoms overlap a number of other, potentially life-threatening conditions, it is imperative that the person see his/her physician or a gastroenterologist, to receive a proper diagnosis. While it is not clear what causes it, we know that people with IBS have changes in the way sensations are perceived in the colon. There are some anatomical changes in the lining of the colon and to the nervous system of the colon. What causes these changes is unknown. Symptoms range in severity from an occasional mild episode to a debilitating, life-altering illness which prevents the individual from working or from functioning normally. The symptoms are exacerbated by stress, changes in diet and changes in daily routine, among many other things. Some people are so sensitive they must eat virtually the same foods, in the same proportions, at the same times each day or suffer the consequences. Until recently, IBS was thought to be simply a "nervous" disorder and was not taken as seriously as it deserved. While IBS will not kill you, it is far more than just a nuisance.

Traditional treatment consists of fiber therapy, antispasmodic medications and antidepressants. Fiber is added to the diet both through the use of bulking type laxatives and a high fiber diet. These are just as important for those people whose chief complaint is diarrhea as it is for constipation. Antispasmodic medications, such as Bentyl, reduce the spasms in the gut. Antidepressants, in this case, actually function on the nervous system of the gut to reduce its sensitivity to pain and other sensations rather than acting as emotional antidepressants. However, anyone who has suffered from the symptoms of IBS for any length of time justifiably presents with some degree of depressions. It is important to note that only 25% of the people who suffer with IBS symptoms respond to traditional treatments. That means that 75% do not seem to improve with traditional treatments or do not improve enough to actually feel better.

However, the evidence is overwhelming that IBS symptoms do respond to hypnosis. Not only do they respond, but they respond dramatically! The research evidence to support this is so dramatic and so overwhelming that Adriane Fugh-Berman, MD, chair of the National Women’s Health Network in Washington, D.C., says that hypnosis should be the treatment of choice for severe cases of IBS. In my practice, so far, 100% of the clients I have treated with hypnosis have shown marked improvement in their symptoms. Seven of the first eight clients (the number in the first phase of a three-stage research project) became symptom free during the six sessions. While the eighth subject did not become symptom free in the standard six session regimen, his symptoms did improve significantly in the number of symptoms, duration and severity. He has continued his sessions to gain even greater relief. All of these clients had refractory (meaning that had not responded to drug and diet therapy) IBS symptoms for greater than four years. Most reported that the symptoms had started in childhood. Clients ranged in age from 35 to 50 years old. Although all of them were on multiple medications, including steroids, bulking laxatives and on special diets, none of them had gained relief from their symptoms.

For instance, Melinda is a 35 year old special education teacher. When Melinda first came to my office, she had recently been released from the hospital for a particularly severe episode of uncontrolled diarrhea. She was on high dosages of multiple medications. She reported that the medications had too many side effects, and that in spite of them, she had not seen much improvement in her symptoms. While she was no longer experiencing fecal incontinence, she still had watery stools several times a day. When asked to rank her symptoms on a scale of zero to ten, with ten being the worst and zero indicating the absence of symptoms, she ranked them as follows: diarrhea 5; abdominal pain 7; bloating 8; fatigue 8. At the beginning of the sixth and final sessions she ranked the same symptoms as follows: diarrhea 0; abdominal pain 0; bloating "maybe 2"; fatigue 0. She reported these results in symptom improvement in spite of higher levels of stress caused by the unexpected deaths of two close friends. Working in conjunction with her physician, Melinda is now off medications for her IBS symptoms.

Jackie characterized her symptoms as a "panic attack of the bowels." After only two sessions, she reported that her symptoms had improved so much that she "actually got out with (her) family and went a few places" for the first time in over four years. She cannot remember when she did not have IBS symptoms. Now, she reports that she "feels better upon awakening than I have in years." She no longer has abdominal pain upon awakening. Even though she had one period of diarrhea in a time of unduly high stress, she still had no pain associated with it. Working in conjunction with her physician, Jackie has come off all the drugs she was on prior to starting the program and has not had a return of her symptoms even though her stress levels remain high.

Susan, a financial specialist, during her first visit characterized her symptoms as: pain 10; gas 7; bloating 10; constipation 10; and diarrhea 2. By the middle of the program, she reported her symptoms as follows: pain 0; gas 1; bloating 0; constipation 0-1; diarrhea 0. By the end of the program, she reported zeros in all categories.

The common thread among these people is that they had unabated IBS symptoms which interfered with their daily living. None of them actually believed hypnosis would work to alleviate their symptoms. However, they were so desperate for relief they were willing to try anything. They were desperate for hope, for an alternative to learning to live with debilitating symptoms. Now, due to hypnotherapy treatment for their symptoms, they have been able to return to a much more normal lifestyle.

The hypnotherapy program I used with this people was modified from the research done by gastroenterologist P. J. Whorwell, MD, in Manchester, England, and Dr. Olafur Palsson's research done at Eastern Virginia Medical Center. The clients came for six to eight sessions spaced two weeks apart. The hypnosis portion of their session was tape recorded and they were instructed to play the tape for themselves daily until the next session. All suggestions and imagery was "gut specific" and incorporated information on how a normal gastrointestinal system functions. Suggestions were made about the intestines being coated with a special protective coating to insulate it from irritants, etc. At the last session, subjects were taught self hypnosis techniques and given instructions on how to formulate their own self hypnotic suggestions.

There is no doubt in the world literature that hypnosis is a highly effective treatment for IBS symptoms. In today's climate of managed care, hypnosis represents a brief therapy which is benign, inexpensive and non-invasive. Since IBS symptoms fluctuate, you have to evaluate the results over a long period of time. What Dr. Whorwell, Dr. Palsson and I all found to be true is that the greater number of sessions, the longer lasting relief the client gets. While many clients will report symptom relief after one to two sessions, unless they come for multiple sessions spaced over a period of three to four months, they will notice a gradual "creeping back" of their symptoms. Clients following the multi-session approach have maintained their symptom improvements for up to three years after the sessions ended - so far.

In today's insurance climate of managed care, hypnotherapy for IBS symptoms is being enthusiastically embraced. It is imperative however, that you work closely with the client's personal physical and that you not accept clients who have not gotten a definite diagnosis of IBS.

Melissa J. Roth is a Certified Hypnotherapist and a Doctor of Clinical Hypnotherapy candidate through the American Institute of Hypnotherapy