Home
  2010.09.03.Fir.
E-Journal
Online Submissions
Feed Back
Papers With
a High
Impact Factor
Links
Visiting Times:
    
Visiting Times
  of Today:
      
 Now Online:
      
 
Notice from Thomson/ISI 2006-07-14: World Journal of Gastroenterology has been re-accepted for coverage in Current Contents/Clinical Medicine and SCIE.
 HTML      PDF

McFarland LV, Dublin S.Meta-analysis of probiotics for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome.
World J Gastroenterol 2008 May;14(17):2650-2661

Meta-analysis of probiotics for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome

McFarland LV, Dublin S.

Department of Health Services Research and Development, VA Puget Sound Health Care System, Metropolitan Park West, 1100 Olive Way, Suite #1400, Seattle WA 98101, United States. lynne.mcfarland@va.gov

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic condition affecting 3%-25% of the general population. As no curative treatment is available, therapy is aimed at reducing symptoms, often with little success. Because alteration of the normal intestinal microflora has been observed in IBS, probiotics (beneficial microbes taken to improve health) may be useful in reducing symptoms. This paper systematically reviews randomized, controlled, blinded trials of probiotics for the treatment of IBS and synthesizes data on efficacy across trials of adequate quality. PubMed, Medline, Google Scholar, NIH registry of clinical trials, metaRegister, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials were searched from 1982-2007. We also conducted secondary searches of reference lists, reviews, commentaries, relevant articles on associated diseases, books and meeting abstracts. Twenty trials with 23 probiotic treatment arms and a total of 1404 subjects met inclusion criteria. Probiotic use was associated with improvement in global IBS symptoms compared to placebo [pooled relative risk (RRpooled) 0.77, 95% confidence interval (95% CI) 0.62-0.94]. Probiotics were also associated with less abdominal pain compared to placebo [RRpooled = 0.78 (0.69-0.88)]. Too few studies reported data on other IBS symptoms or on specific probiotic strains to allow estimation of a pooled RR. While our analyses suggest that probiotic use may be associated with improvement in IBS symptoms compared to placebo, these results should be interpreted with caution, given the methodological limitations of contributing studies. Probiotics warrant further study as a potential therapy for IBS.
 


The WJG Press, Room 1066, Yishou Garden ,
No. 58, North Langxinzhuang Road,
PO Box 2345, Beijing 100023, China
Fax: +86-10-85381893
Telephone: +86-10-85381892
E-mail: wjg@wjgnet.com
http: // www.wjgnet.com
Copyright 2004-2007 by The WJG Press and Beijing Baishideng BioMed Technology Co., Ltd.