DEA Lookup.com News
Return to News Home

Meditation And Yoga May Ease Diseases That Cause Gut Pain

A new study suggests meditation and yoga may also alleviate the symptoms of two gut disorders.

Esha Day, Huffington Post, May 19, 2015

The study looked at people who had either irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) or irritable bowel disease (IBD). It found that those who did yoga and meditation regularly for two months had fewer symptoms associated with the two gut disorders.

This mind/body intervention seemed to work by inducing genetic changes in the body, the study authors said. The findings suggest that stress-relieving meditation can suppress the activities of genes that help cause inflammation and other immune system problems in people with IBS or IBD, the study stated.

Previous research has shown that meditation can change people’s gene expression in some ways, but the new study is among the first to show an impact on gene expression in people with a specific disease, said lead researcher Braden Kuo, a gastroenterologist at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. The study used a mind/body technique called relaxation response, which a Harvard University doctor developed in the 1970s.

The new findings are especially interesting given that researchers have established a relationship between stress and digestive problems. Research has shown that psychological trauma can contribute to IBS, a disorder that leads to abdominal pain, constipation and diarrhea.

The condition is fairly common in the United States, affecting about 1 in every 10 people at some point in their lives, according to the International Foundation for Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders. Yet scientists do not exactly know what causes the disorder.

Although IBS and IBD can be mistaken as the same condition, they are actually very different. Unlike IBS, IBD involves chronic inflammation of the digestive tract. The two main types of IBD are ulcerative colitis, which affects the colon, and Crohn’s disease, which mostly affects the intestines but can occur anywhere in the digestive system.

However, IBS and IBD share some common factors: Both can be triggered by stress, and neither has real treatment options. The drugs currently available can only lessen the severity of symptoms and bring some temporary relief.

In the new study, researchers enrolled 19 people with IBS and 29 with IBD. They all underwent a nine-week program that included breathing exercises, meditation and yoga. They met for a group session every week and practiced the activities at home for 15 to 20 minutes every day.

Symptoms and genes

The researchers assessed the participants’ symptoms before, after and midway through the study, and they took blood samples for genetic analyses. However, the study did not include a separate control group of patients who did not practice meditation.

At the end of the study, the participants reported a reduction in their symptoms compared with what they experienced at the study’s start. A genetic analysis of their blood provided evidence of changes in genetic pathways related to the two disorders.

Significantly, more genetic changes were observed in people with IBD than in those with IBS, said Manoj Bhasin, who co-authored the study and is the director of bioinformatics at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Researchers found that more than 1,000 genes were altered in IBD patients over the study period, whereas only 119 genes changed in the people with IBS.

The activities of one inflammation-related gene were suppressed in both groups, according to the study. This suggests that meditation and similar practices may offset stress and inflammation, the researchers said.

“In both IBS and IBD, the pathway controlled by a protein called NF-kB emerged as one of those most significantly affected by the relaxation response,” Towia Libermann, a senior researcher for the study and an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, said in a statement. It’s possible that relaxation techniques could help both people with IBS and those with IBD, he said.

The researchers noted two important limitations in the study: First, two tests that measured certain markers of inflammation in the blood showed no changes over the study period. Second, previous research has shown that even a placebo can sometimes produce adequate relief of IBS symptoms.

More studies, including randomized trials that include a control group, are needed before meditation and yoga could be suggested as a treatment for patients with these disorders, the researchers said.

Return to News Home