Archive for the ‘IBS’ Category

A Gut Feeling - IBS & Hypnotherapy

Monday, February 11th, 2008


As many as one in five people in Britain goes on to develop IBS, with symptoms including stomach pain, diarrhoea and constipation. Half the work done by gastroenterologists concerns IBS related symptoms.

New research claims that hypnotherapy has proven to be an effective long-term treatment for IBS and that almost three-quarters (71%) of patients responded well to hypnotherapy and most did not deteriorate over time.
More than 200 patients with IBS were monitored after undergoing gut-directed hypnotherapy, each recording their symptoms, quality of life and levels of anxiety and stress before and after treatment.

The research was carried out by a team at Withington Hospital in Manchester, where the UK’s first NHS hypnotherapy unit has been established. They concluded that “the beneficial effects of hypnotherapy appear to last at least five years”, making it “a viable therapeutic option” for treating IBS.
There was also improvement in quality of life and levels of anxiety and depression, although this decreased over time. However, patients said they took fewer drugs and did not need to see their doctors as often after having hypnotherapy.

Local Cognitive Hypnotherapist, Brenda Bentley has had excellent success in treating IBS with her clients. The reason that hypnotherapy is so successful is due to concentration of neuro-transmitters in the stomach and their link to the bodies stress response.

“Have you ever considered the terms ‘comfort eating’ or ‘gut feeling’ or why you get butterflies in your stomach?”

“The stomach has an independent network of over 100 billion neurons in the gut not only signals our bodies to stress but causes illness, including IBS.” says Bentley.

In particular one client, who suffered from IBS for seven years and tried everything including eliminating common dietary irritants such as wheat and dairy.

Samantha Brown, 35, mother of one from Stratford upon Avon commented: “after years of suffering, my mood is enhanced, my energy levels have increased and my stomach is flat again. It’s really improved the quality of my life.”

End

Note to Editor: Brenda Bentley is a new therapist practicing cognitive hypnotherapy at Octagon Therapy Centre — a new therapy centre at 9 Guild Street, Stratford upon Avon CV37 6RE.
Birmingham: Harborne Complementary Health Clinic, 321 Harborne Lane, Harborne, Birmingham, B17 0NT

Contact: Brenda Bentley, 0794 880 1229

Brenda Bentley
DipCHyp, HPD, MNCH, PNLP
BUILDING BELIEF ALLIANCE
http://www.buildingbelief.com/
T: 0794 880 1229
E: info@buildingbelief.com

A Gut Instinct… IBS & Hypnotherapy

Monday, February 11th, 2008

As many as one in five people in Britain goes on to develop IBS, with symptoms including stomach pain, diarrhoea and constipation. Half the work done by gastroenterologists concerns IBS related symptoms.

 New research claims that hypnotherapy has proven to be an effective long-term treatment for IBS and that almost three-quarters (71%) of patients responded well to hypnotherapy and most did not deteriorate over time.

More than 200 patients with IBS were monitored after undergoing gut-directed hypnotherapy, each recording their symptoms, quality of life and levels of anxiety and stress before and after treatment.

The research was carried out by a team at Withington Hospital in Manchester, where the UK’s first NHS hypnotherapy unit has been established. They concluded that “the beneficial effects of hypnotherapy appear to last at least five years”, making it “a viable therapeutic option” for treating IBS.

There was also improvement in quality of life and levels of anxiety and depression, although this decreased over time. However, patients said they took fewer drugs and did not need to see their doctors as often after having hypnotherapy.

Local Cognitive Hypnotherapist, Brenda Bentley has had excellent success in treating IBS with her clients. The reason that hypnotherapy is so successful is due to concentration of neuro-transmitters in the stomach and their link to the bodies stress response.

“Have you ever considered the terms ‘comfort eating’ or ‘gut feeling’ or why you get butterflies in your stomach?”

“The stomach has an independent network of over 100 billion neurons in the gut not only signals our bodies to stress but causes illness, including IBS.” says Bentley.

In particular one client, who suffered from IBS for seven years and tried everything including eliminating common dietary irritants such as wheat and dairy.
Faith Brown, 35, mother of one from Stratford upon Avon commented: “after years of suffering, my mood is enhanced, my energy levels have increased and my stomach is flat again. It’s really improved the quality of my life.”

End

Note to Editor: Brenda Bentley is a new therapist practicing cognitive hypnotherapy at Octagon Therapy Centre — a new therapy centre at 9 Guild Street, Stratford upon Avon CV37 6RE.

Birmingham: Harborne Complementary Health Clinic, 321 Harborne Lane, Harborne, Birmingham, B17 0NT

Contact: Brenda Bentley, 0794 880 1229

Brenda Bentley
DipCHyp, HPD, MNCH, PNLP

BUILDING BELIEF ALLIANCE
www.buildingbelief.com

T: 0794 880 1229
E: info@buildingbelief.com

Hypnotism: It’s all in the mind

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

Once regarded as a cheap stage trick, hypnotism is proven to be a powerful medical treatment - and now it’s available on the NHS. Roger Dobson reports

There’s no magic, no swinging pendulums or swaying watches, and no one is counting backwards as they slump into unconsciousness. This is medical rather than stage or movie hypnotism, and it is increasingly being used to treat the symptoms of diseases and conditions as diverse as asthma, cystic fibrosis, snoring, migraines and warts.
It’s been used to allow surgery and dental work without anaesthesia, and for pain-free childbirth without medication. And new evidence from the UK’s first and only NHS centre offering hypnotherapy shows that it’s highly effective in treating some types of chest pain as well as irritable bowel syndrome.
New research from America has also found that more than half the people who used hypnotherapy to give up smoking were able to kick the habit, while researchers in France have successfully used the therapy to lower blood pressure.
Hypnosis has been used for centuries to treat diverse ills, but it went into relative decline with the rise of modern medicine, and in the last 200 years it’s been more associated with stage magicians and movie villains than medicine.

Film-makers take a lot of blame for damaging the image of hypnotism: “When a hypnotist appears on screen, expect evil. If his induction features magnetic hand passes, he’s probably about to compel someone to commit a crime. If he hypnotises with an intense stare, his intent is likelier seduction,” says Dr Deirdre Barrett of Harvard Medical School, who has studied more than 200 films about hypnotism.

At the University Hospital of South Manchester, Professor Peter Whorwell, a gastroenterologist who heads the only NHS-funded hypnotherapy centre in Britain, which has been pioneering the therapy as a treatment of irritable bowel syndrome, agrees. “One of the problems is the name,” he says. “If we started off again with a name like neuromodulation, for example, it would be more readily accepted. The name hypnotism has so much baggage attached. Cognitive behavioural therapy is now reasonably well accepted, and so, too, is psychotherapy, but of the three, I would say hypnotism is potentially the most powerful. It is becoming a treatment of choice for IBS.

“When I am dead and gone, people are going to suddenly realise that hypnotism is an incredibly powerful tool and question why it has been ignored for so long.”

Just how it works is not clear, and some critics suggest it’s simply a way of relaxing. But practitioners say there’s more to it, and that under hypnosis the patient can concentrate intensely on a specific thought, memory, feeling or sensation while blocking out distractions.

“The first thing you have to do is get past the myths and misconceptions about clinical hypnosis,” says Dr Carol Ginandes who led a study into its use for anxiety at Harvard Medical School. “It’s not used for entertainment. There are no Svengali-like figures in power-dominant relationships. It’s not a sleep state or something that someone can make you do. It’s a state of heightened, focused attention that we can all shift into very naturally.”

In a report in the Harvard Magazine, she explains how it has an effect: “We don’t yet understand the mechanisms by which these suggestions are transplanted by the mind into the language of the body, but let’s say someone is a smoker. When he’s in a hypnotic state, I could suggest that he’s going to find himself craving cigarettes less and less over a period of time. If he’s ready to quit, that suggestion will be planted at a deep level in his mind, like seeds planted beneath the soil rather than scattered over the top, helping him tap into some useful physical and psychological resources.”

Smoking
In a study at the Scott and White Memorial Hospital in Texas, smokers were given eight sessions of therapy over two months, and told to quit smoking one week after beginning the course of treatment.

Carbon-monoxide concentration tests were carried out on the patients to see whether they had smoked after treatment, and results showed that by the end of treatment 40 per cent had given up. At a follow-up 12 weeks later, 60 per cent had quit.

Dental
Hypnotherapy is increasingly being used in a number of areas of dentistry, including dental phobia, teeth-grinding and extractions and fillings. It has also been used for dental surgery that is usually done under local or general anaesthetic.

In one reported case, a patient in Scotland has also had a tooth implant, which involved putting a titanium rod into her jaw. In her case, hypnosis was used to alter the sensation in the areas where surgery was taking place. She was asked to imagine a dial where zero meant no pain.

Chest pains
Up to one-third of patients who have angina-like chest pain are found to have normal coronary arteries, but many continue to suffer painful symptoms despite no evidence of heart disease. Non-cardiac chest pain is a problem because there is little or no treatment.

In a new NHS-funded trial at Manchester, 28 patients were given 12 sessions of hypnotherapy or a placebo treatment. After being hypnotised, patients were told to focus on the chest, and given repetitive suggestions about reducing pain. Patients were also given a tape of a session and encouraged to practise at home. Results show that of those who had the therapy, eight out of 10 had an all-round improvement in symptoms.

Wound healing
Researchers at Harvard Medical School have shown that broken bones and surgical wounds heal faster in patients who have hypnotherapy. Six weeks after breaking their ankles, patients being treated with hypnotherapy were three weeks ahead in their healing schedule than those who were just put in plaster.

In a second study, the researchers had similar results with surgical wounds. Before surgery, suggestions were made under therapy on pain and anxiety, and on decreased inflammation, reduced scar tissue, and accelerated wound-healing. Results show the women who had the therapy healed significantly faster.

Irritable bowel syndrome
One of the most common gastrointestinal disorders, with research showing that between five and 20 per cent of us suffer at some time. Its main symptoms include abdominal pain, diarrhoea or constipation. The exact cause is not known, but in some people changes in the balance of bacteria that line the gut are thought to be involved, as well as inflammation. Existing treatment for the condition can be only moderately effective.

Research at the University Hospital of South Manchester, where the first trial of hypnotherapy for the condition was carried out, shows that the majority of sufferers can benefit. “We have found that IBS patients treated with hypnotherapy remain well in the long term, with dramatically reduced medication needs,” say the researchers.

Cystic fibrosis
According to a University of Michigan report, hypnotherapy can reduce symptoms of cough, shortness of breath, anxiety and other symptoms of cystic fibrosis.

A study at the Robert C Schwartz Cystic Fibrosis Center at the State University of New York also shows that self-hypnosis can be highly effective. “Many of the patients used hypnosis for more than one purpose, including relaxation (61 per cent of patients), relief of pain associated with medical procedures (31 per cent), headache relief (16 per cent), changing the taste of medications to make the flavour more palatable (10 per cent), and control of other symptoms associated with CF (18 per cent). The patients successfully utilised self-hypnosis 86 per cent of the time.”

Childbirth
Research at the Women’s and Children’s Hospital in Adelaide, where hypnosis is used for women in labour, shows it is highly effective. Women who had the therapy, which was given after 37 weeks gestation, used fewer epidurals - 36 per cent compared with 53 per cent in other women. A second study showed that women taught self-hypnosis reduced their need for analgesia by half, epidurals by 70 per cent, and were more than twice as likely to be satisfied with their pain management in labour compared with other women.

Snoring
According to Harley Street psychiatrist Dr Tom Kraft, snoring can be treated with hypnotherapy by suggesting under hypnosis that the sufferer turns on his side every time he begins to snore.

“I have reported on the case of a 53-year-old man who came to see me after his snoring led to his wife throwing him out of the bedroom,” he says. “After I treated him, his snoring went, and he was allowed back in the bedroom, for which he was eternally grateful. After 10 sessions, the patient no longer snored, and when he was followed up later the improvements had been maintained.”

What is hypnotism?
What hypnotism doesn’t do is put people to sleep, or make them lose control, or do things against their will. “Many see it as the mind being taken over by the hypnotist and loss of control, which is completely erroneous,” says Professor Peter Whorwell at the University Hospital of South Manchester. “As a consequence of this, the whole subject is surrounded by a cloud of mystery.”

In hypnotherapy, patients are helped by the therapist to reach what’s described as a relaxed state of consciousness, like being absorbed in a good book. Therapists may start by describing images that create a sense of security and well-being. They may then suggest ways of achieving specific goals, such as getting rid of phobias.
Just how it works is not clear. Practitioners say the patient can concentrate intensely on a specific thought, memory, feeling or sensation while blocking out distractions.

Source: Independent, Published: 30 January 2007
http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and-wellbeing/health-news/hypnotism-its-all-in-the-mind-434295.html
 

Hypnotherapy helps IBS

Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

A new report from the department of gastroenterology at King’s College Hospital, London, published in the British Medical Journal, highlights the fact that Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) is a combination of “psychological” as well as physical factors, and that psychological therapies, including hypnotherapy, can be an alternative to medication.

Excerpt from the Daily Mail:

Hypnotherapy could be the latest weapon in the fight against irritable bowel syndrome, providing benefits that last up to five years.

Conventional treatment – including antidepressant and painkilling drugs – is ineffective, according to a report which says doctors should consider offering psychological therapies.

The report says the condition may have a partial “psychological basis”. 

Small trials have found hypnotherapy was successful as a means of managing symptoms, says a report published today in the British Medical Journal.

It found patients with IBS are more likely to suffer from depression and “abnormal” behaviour patterns including anxiety.

They also display somatisation – the conversion of emotional, mental, or psychosocial problems into physical complaints.

Excerpt from BBC News:

Hypnotherapy could help people with severe irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), researchers say.

Doctors should consider using this and other “psychological” treatments such as antidepressants to help sufferers, King’s College London experts say in the British Medical Journal.

However, a shortage of therapists could hinder this, they add.

Experts said there was growing evidence that IBS cases have psychological as well as biological elements. 

Dr Nick Read, a psychologist and adviser to the IBS Network, said he felt that the majority of IBS patients had a psychologists element to their condition.

He said: “There’s now a lot of evidence that psychological therapies can be effective, but a lot of doctors remain sceptical, and carry on treating with drugs which have side-effects, and which basically don’t work.

“I work with patients with IBS trying to understand what, for each patient, lies behind the illness.”