Here are four things to know:
1. IBS affects approximately 11 percent of people worldwide. Diagnosis typically involves colonoscopy to rule out cancer or other organic disease.
2. In the “noisy guts project,” researchers developed a prototype belt that uses machine-learning techniques to identify sound patterns emanating from the abdomen.
3. The researchers used recordings from 31 IBS patients and 37 healthy participants to build an acoustic index model to differentiate IBS gut sounds from gut sounds unrelated to IBS.
4. Study author Barry Marshall, MBBS, of the University of Western Australia in Crawley suggests the device could eliminate the need for colonoscopy testing for IBS. If the U.S. reduced the number of colonoscopies by 10 percent, he claimed, billions of dollars would be saved.
More articles on gastroenterology:
Synergy Pharmaceuticals finds depressed uroguanylin levels linked to CIC & IBS-C
Mayo Clinic, Cabell Huntington Hospital & more: 3 GI practices in the news
62% of this patient group saw jump in rectal cancer rate
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