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Background: The current treatment
of IBS is often unsatisfactory and frustrating. Several
controlled trials have demonstrated benefits of tricyclic antidepressants for irritable
bowel syndrome, especially when pain is a prominent symptom but the efficacy of
antidepressants in irritable bowel syndrome is controversial. The aim of this
study was to compare the effect of doxepin and nortriptyline on
diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome.
Methods: Seventy-five patients with IBS according to Rome
III criteria were treated for two months. The
patients were randomly assigned to one of three groups treated with doxepin,
nortriptyline or placebo. Subjects were assessed clinically one month and two
months after treatment. The symptoms and adverse effects of the drugs were
recorded in the questionnaire. The total score was considered as the number of
the symptoms for each patient, which ranged between zero and six.
Results: Improvements in abdominal pain and bloating in the doxepin group were
significantly higher than the nortriptyline or the placebo groups (P=0.001
and P=0.012, respectively).
However, improvement in diarrhea in patients on nortriptyline was significantly
higher than the other groups (P=0.018). The average
improvement of symptoms in the patients after two months of treatment in
doxepin, nortriptyline and placebo groups, respectively were 2.56,
2 and 0.6 (P<0.05).
Conclusion: Both
doxepin and nortriptyline are effective for the treatment of
diarrhea-predominant irritable bowel syndrome in a period of two months but doxepin
seems to be more efficacious than nortriptyline in this regard. However, larger
comparative trials are suggested.
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