Symptoms consistent with IBS and functional diarrhea occur more frequently in people after bacterial gastroenteritis compared with controls, even after careful exclusion of people with pre-existing FGIDs. The frequency is similar at 3 and 6 months. Our findings support the existence of postinfectious IBS and give an accurate estimate of its frequency.
Postinfectious functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) may not be specific to gastroenteritis. This pilot study aimed to ascertain the 3- and 6-month incidence of functional gut disorders in people with non-gastrointestinal (GI) infection, gastroenteritis and healthy controls. This was a prospective study of three cohorts recruited from hospital (non-GI infections) and the community (others). FGIDs were diagnosed using self-completed Rome II modular questionnaires administered at baseline, 3 and 6 months. Thirty-six subjects with non-GI infection, 219 healthy subjects and 108 with bacterial gastroenteritis participated. No difference in incidence of FGID was detected between the GI and non-GI infection cohorts. Any FGID was more frequent in people who had a non-GI infection than in controls at both 3 [odds ratio: 4.34 (95% CI: 3.60-16.45)] and 6 months [4.76 (4.42-27.92)]. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) alone was more frequent in people with non-GI infections than in controls at 3 months (6.12 [1.30-29.12]) but did not quite reach statistical significance at 6 months (4.58 [0.79-26.46]). Our findings were unexpected. Postinfectious FGIDs may be related to non-GI and GI infection, although not all potential biases were controlled in study design. Further studies need to explore these preliminary findings and, if confirmed, the underlying mechanisms.
IBS is more frequent before diagnosis in people with bacterial gastroenteritis presenting to their primary care physician than in community controls. Studies that examine the rate of IBS after bacterial gastroenteritis need to carefully exclude people with prior IBS in a systematic way.
Healthcare workers and teachers should report suspected outbreaks of serotype 1 pneumococcal disease early, and childhood immunisation should be considered
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