| Literature DB >> 30617919 |
Uday C Ghoshal1, Sanjeev Sachdeva2, Nitesh Pratap3, Abhai Verma4, Arun Karyampudi5, Asha Misra4, Philip Abraham6, Shobna J Bhatia7, Naresh Bhat8, Abhijit Chandra9, Karmabir Chakravartty10, Sujit Chaudhuri11, T S Chandrasekar12, Ashok Gupta13, Mahesh Goenka14, Omesh Goyal15, Govind Makharia16, V G Mohan Prasad17, N K Anupama8, Maneesh Paliwal18, Balakrishnan S Ramakrishna19, D N Reddy5, Gautam Ray20, Akash Shukla21, Rajesh Sainani22, Shine Sadasivan23, Shivaram P Singh24, Rajesh Upadhyay25, Jayanthi Venkataraman26.
Abstract
The Indian Motility and Functional Diseases Association and the Indian Society of Gastroenterology developed this evidence-based practice guideline for management of chronic constipation. A modified Delphi process was used to develop this consensus containing 29 statements, which were generated by electronic voting iteration as well as face to face meeting and review of the supporting literature primarily from India. These statements include 9 on epidemiology, clinical presentation, and diagnostic criteria; 8 on pathophysiology; and the remaining 12 on investigations and treatment. When the proportion of those who voted either to accept completely or with minor reservation was 80% or higher, the statement was regarded as accepted. The members of the consensus team believe that this would be useful for teaching, clinical practice, and research on chronic constipation in India and in other countries with similar spectrum of the disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Bristol stool form; Colon transit; Fecal evacuation disorder; Functional gastrointestinal disorders; Irritable bowel syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30617919 PMCID: PMC6339668 DOI: 10.1007/s12664-018-0894-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Gastroenterol ISSN: 0254-8860
Level of the agreement, level of evidence, and recommendation used in this consensus
| Level of agreement | |
| I | Accepted completely |
| II | Accepted with some reservation |
| III | Accepted with major reservation |
| IV | Rejected with reservation |
| V | Rejected completely |
| Level of evidence | |
| I | Evidence obtained from at least one randomized controlled trial |
| II-1 | Evidence obtained from well-designed controlled trials without randomization |
| II-2 | Evidence obtained from well-designed cohort or case-controlled study |
| II-3 | Evidence obtained from the comparison between time and places with or without intervention |
| III | The opinion of respected authorities, based on experience or expert committees |
| Recommendation (based on the quality of evidence) | |
| A | There is good evidence to support the statement |
| B | There is fair evidence to support the statement |
| C | There is poor evidence to support the statement but recommendation made on other grounds |
| D | There is fair evidence to refute the statement |
| E | There is good evidence to refute the statement |
Community studies on chronic constipation in India
| Author | Place | Sample size | Criteria for diagnosis | Prevalence of constipation (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Makharia et al. 2011 [ | Rural Haryana | 4767 | Self-perception | 11.6 |
| Rome III (for IBS-C) | 0.3 | |||
| Ghoshal et al. 2008 [ | Multicentric (22 centers) | Complainants: 2785 | Self-perception | 53 |
| Non-complainants: 4500 | Self-perception | ~ 41 | ||
| Ghoshal and Singh 2017 [ | Rural Uttar Pradesh | 2774 | Rome III | 2.4 |
| Rajput and Saini 2014 [ | Chandigarh | 505 | Rome II | 16.8 |
| Self-perception | 24.8 | |||
| Panigrahi et al. 2013 [ | Odisha | 1200 | ≤ 3 stools/week | 2.6 |
IBC-C constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome
Studies comparing functional constipation and constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome among patients with chronic constipation using Rome III criteria
| Author | Sample size | Frequency (%) | Mean age (years) | Sex (M/F) | Risk factors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rooprai et al. 2017 [ | 925 CC | |||||
| FC | 699 | 75.6 | 46.8 | 1.7:1 | Hypertension, diabetes mellitus | |
| IBS-C | 226 | 24.4 | 43.8 | 1.9:1 | Acid peptic disease | |
| Ray 2016 [ | 331 CC | |||||
| FC | 224 | 69 | 63.4 | 1.1:1 | Diabetes mellitus, hypothyroid, organic brain disease, drugs | |
| IBS-C | 36 | 13.8 | 33.7 | 1.6:1 | ||
| Shah et al. 2014 [ | 99 CC | |||||
| FC | 74 | 75 | 53 | – | ||
| IBS-C | 25 | 25 | 55 | – | ||
| Ghoshal 2017 [ | 96 FED | |||||
| FC | 64 | 66 | 6.1:1 | |||
| IBS-C | 28 | 29 | 4.6:1 | |||
CC chronic constipation, FC functional constipation, IBS-C constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome, FED fecal evacuation disorder, y year, M male, F female
Studies from outside India that reported molecular level pathophysiological abnormalities in patients with chronic constipation
| Author, year | Number of subjects | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Park et al. 1995 | Idiopathic CC: 14, non-CC controls: 17 | Higher number of PGP-9.5 immunoreactive nerve fibers in the muscularis propria [ |
| Sjolund et al. 1997 | STC: 18 | Colonic specimens showed an increased peptide YY and 5-HT containing cells and also increased content of VIP, galanin, substance P, and NPY [ |
| Faussone-Pellegrini et al. 1999 | STC: 7, non-CC controls: 5 | A lower total neuron density and VIP-immunoreactive neurons at the two enteric plexuses reduced NOS-immunoreactive neurons at the myenteric plexus but more NOS-immunoreactive neurons at the submucous plexus [ |
| Knowles et al. 2001 | STC: 36, controls: 80 | Increased frequency of smooth muscle inclusion bodies suggestive of myopathy [ |
| Wedel et al. 2002 | STC: 11, non-CC controls: 13 | Reduced number of ICC, myenteric plexus hypoganglionosis [ |
| Lee et al. 2005 | STC: 10, non-CC controls: 10 | Decreased densities of ICC and PGP 9.5 reactive neuronal structures [ |
| Bassotti and Villanacci 2006 | STC: 26, non-CC controls: 10 | Reduced density of enteric ganglia cells, glial cells, and interstitial cells of Cajal but more apoptotic enteric neurons [ |
| Wedel et al. 2006 | STC: 13, controls: 12 | Myenteric hypoganglionosis, deficiency of ICC, and reduced immunoreactivity to smooth muscle markers [ |
| Wang et al. 2008 | STC: 15, non-CC controls: 45 | Reduced number of ICC and enteric neurofilaments in muscularis propria [ |
| Bassotti et al. 2011 | STC: 29, non-CC controls: 20 | Higher number of mast cells in all colonic segments [ |
| Bassotti et al. 2012 | FED: 11, non-CC controls: 20 | Higher number of mast cells in all colonic segments [ |
| Bassotti et al. 2012 | FED: 17, non-CC controls: 10 | Fewer glial cells in the enteric plexus; and reduced estrogen receptors β in the glial cells [ |
| Chan et al. 2013 | STC: 61 | Reduction in smoothelin immunoreactivity in the muscularis propria [ |
CC chronic constipation, STC slow transit constipation, FED fecal evacuation disorder, PGP protein gene product, 5-HT 5-hydroxytrptamine, VIP vasoactive intestinal peptide, NPY neuropeptide Y, NOS nitric oxide synthase, ICC interstitial cell of Cajal
Fig. 1Algorithm for diagnosis and treatment of chronic constipation in adults. PEG polyethylene glycol, MOM milk of magnesia
Fig. 2Algorithm for diagnosis and treatment of refractory chronic constipation in adults. CTT colon transit time, BET balloon expulsion test, ARM anorectal manometry, NTC normal transit constipation, IBS-C constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome, STC slow transit constipation, FED fecal evacuation disorder *Ghoshal UC, et al. Natl Med J India. 2007;20:225–9.
Fig. 3Steps of performing digital rectal examination