Sympathovagal imbalance correlates with IBS symptom severity and shows subtype specificity
This review addresses neural dynamics in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. The scope focuses on the relationship between autonomic function and clinical presentation. The authors synthesize findings indicating that reduced vagal tone with relative sympathetic hyperactivity correlates with symptom severity and shows subtype specificity. No specific intervention or comparator was evaluated as the source is a review rather than a trial. The primary outcome described is the association between sympathovagal imbalance and symptom patterns. Absolute numbers and p-values were not reported in the source material. The review does not provide data on adverse events or tolerability. The authors acknowledge methodological limitations in assessing neural dynamics. They also highlight insufficient integration of multi-system interactions as a constraint. Practice relevance was not reported by the authors. The evidence is observational in nature and does not establish causality. Clinicians should interpret these findings within the context of existing diagnostic frameworks.