标题: | The Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders and the Rome III Process |
时间: | 2021-02-23 15:39:18 |
DOI: | 10.1053/j.gastro.2006.03.008 |
大小: | 356 kb |
页数: | 15 PAGES |
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目录:
- The Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders and the Rome III Process
- The Rome III Classification System FGIDs
- Scientific Observations on the Pathophysiology of Functional GI Disorders
- Genetic Predispositions
- Early Family Environment
- Psychosocial Factors
- Abnormal Motility
- Visceral Hypersensitivity
- Inflammation
- Bacterial Flora
- Brain-Gut Interactions via the CNS-ENS
- Bidirectional “hardwiring” of brain-gut axis
- Stress and postinfectious FGID
- Brain imaging
- Brain-gut peptides
- An Approach to the Care of Patients With Functional GI Disorders
- The Therapeutic Relationship
- Mild symptoms
- Moderate symptoms
- Severe symptoms
- The Therapeutic Relationship
- The Rome Committees and Criteria Development
- Rationale for Symptom-Based Diagnostic Criteria
- Site-specific differences
- Symptoms resulting from multiple in.uencing factors
- Epidemiologic data
- Treatment implications
- Need for diagnostic standards in clinical care and research
- Qualifications for the Use of Symptom- Based Criteria
- Other diseases may coexist that need to be excluded
- Symptoms may overlap with other functional GI disorders
- Symptoms must have begun 6 months prior to diagnosis and be active for 3 months
- Diagnostic categories do not include psychosocial criteria
- Criteria are determined by clinical consensus and existing evidence
- The Rome Committee Process
- Changes Made in Rome III
- Rationale for Symptom-Based Diagnostic Criteria
- Concluding Comments
- Acknowledgment
- References
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