Estimated reading time: 18 minutes
Key Takeaways
- IBS is about twice as common in women, including those assigned female at birth, as in men. The gap is most pronounced during the reproductive years.
- Women with IBS are more likely to experience constipation, severe bloating, and nausea. Men with IBS are more prone to diarrhea-predominant symptoms.
- Sex hormones, primarily estrogen and progesterone, directly affect gut pain sensitivity and motility. A landmark 2025 UCSF study published in Science identified the specific cellular pathway through which estrogen amplifies gut pain in females.
- IBS symptoms in women often shift with the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, and menopause, reflecting how closely the gut and hormonal system are intertwined.
- Several conditions commonly mistaken for IBS in women include endometriosis, SIBO, celiac disease, and pelvic floor dysfunction. An accurate diagnosis matters.
- IBS is manageable. The low-FODMAP diet, gut-brain therapies, targeted medications, and lifestyle changes can all make a meaningful difference.
What Is IBS?
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic functional gastrointestinal disorder defined by recurring abdominal pain and changes in bowel habits.
Affecting 10 to 15 percent of adults worldwide, it is one of the most commonly diagnosed digestive conditions. [1]
Unlike inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), IBS causes no visible structural damage to the gut.
Instead, it reflects a dysfunction in how the gut and brain communicate.
The gut contains more nerve cells than the spinal cord and produces over 90 percent of the body's serotonin.
When the two-way communication network between the digestive system and the brain, known as the gut-brain axis, becomes dysregulated, ordinary digestive sensations can register as pain.
IBS Subtypes
- IBS-C (constipation-predominant): Hard or infrequent stools. More common in women.
- IBS-D (diarrhea-predominant): Loose or frequent stools. More common in men.
- IBS-M (mixed): Both constipation and diarrhea alternate. Affects men and women at roughly equal rates.
How Common Is IBS in Women?
In Western countries, women are approximately twice as likely as men to have IBS, and among those who seek medical care for it, the female-to-male ratio is roughly 2 to 2.5 to 1. [2]
This gap appears around puberty and is most pronounced during the reproductive years. As women pass menopause, IBS rates gradually decline and begin to converge with those of men. [3]
Writing in Gastroenterology, researchers from the Mayo Clinic noted that slow gastric emptying and colonic transit are more common in healthy women than men, contributing to the female preponderance of constipation-related GI symptoms. [3]
"Women tend to report more bloating, indigestion, and nausea than men. Hormonal changes across a woman's life, and differences in anatomy, play a real role in how gastrointestinal symptoms develop and persist."
— Dr. JoAnn Hong-Curtis, MD, Gastroenterologist, Yale Medicine
IBS Symptoms in Women vs. Men
While IBS affects everyone differently, consistent and reproducible patterns have emerged from decades of research comparing how men and women experience the condition.
Symptoms More Severe or Common in Women
A meta-analysis and a major review published in PMC (National Institutes of Health) found that women with IBS are significantly more likely to report abdominal pain, constipation, bloating, abdominal distension, and nausea.
Women also report more extraintestinal symptoms: fatigue, bladder sensitivity, and musculoskeletal pain that goes beyond the gut. [2]
According to a review published in The American Journal of Gastroenterology (PMC), women with IBS are also more likely to have coexisting anxiety and depression compared with men who have IBS.
These psychological symptoms can amplify gut pain signals through the gut-brain axis. [3]
Symptoms More Common in Men
Men with IBS are significantly more likely to experience diarrhea-predominant IBS (IBS-D).
A large pooled analysis found IBS-D prevalence of 50 percent in men versus 31 percent in women, while IBS-C was far more common in women at 40 percent versus 21 percent in men. [2]
Men with IBS also tend to report lower levels of psychological distress and fewer extraintestinal complaints.
However, some researchers note this may partly reflect differences in how symptoms are disclosed rather than true biological differences.
Overlapping Symptoms in All People with IBS
- Recurring abdominal cramps or pain, often relieved after a bowel movement
- Changes in stool frequency or consistency
- Bloating and gas
- A feeling of incomplete bowel emptying
- Urgency to use the bathroom
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Why Do Women Experience IBS Differently?
Estrogen and the Gut-Brain Axis: New Science
A landmark December 2025 study from UC San Francisco, published in the journal Science, identified the specific cellular mechanism by which estrogen amplifies gut pain in females.
Researchers led by Dr. Holly Ingraham and 2021 Nobel Laureate Dr. David Julius found that estrogen receptors cluster in L-cells in the lower colon, triggering a cascade that releases serotonin and activates pain-sensing nerve fibers.
When male mice were given estrogen to match female levels, their gut pain sensitivity rose to match that of females. [4]
"Instead of just saying young women suffer from IBS, we wanted rigorous science explaining why."
— Holly Ingraham, PhD, Herzstein Professor of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, UCSF
"We knew the gut has a sophisticated pain-sensing system, but this study reveals how hormones can dial that sensitivity up by tapping into this system through an interesting and potent cellular connection."
— David Julius, PhD, Nobel Laureate in Physiology or Medicine, UCSF
Earlier foundational work, published in PubMed, confirmed that variations in ovarian hormones across the menstrual cycle affect sensorimotor GI function.
This was observed in both healthy individuals and those with IBS.
These variations appear to modulate pain processing through neuromodulator systems and emotional pain pathways. [5]
The Menstrual Cycle and IBS
Dr. Mindy Lee, MD, Assistant Professor of Clinical Medicine in Gastroenterology and Hepatology at Weill Cornell Medicine, explains that before menstruation, high estrogen and progesterone levels cause increased bloating and constipation.
Once hormone levels fall at the onset of menstruation, women tend to shift toward diarrhea and increased pain sensitivity. [6]
"In general, immediately before a woman menstruates, there's a higher level of estrogen and progesterone that causes more bloating and constipation. Then hormone levels start to fall at the onset of menstruation, and during their periods, women tend to have more symptoms of diarrhea and increased pain sensitivity."
— Dr. Mindy Lee, MD, Weill Cornell Medicine
This cyclical pattern is one of the most well-replicated findings in IBS research and helps explain why many women feel that their gut and their cycle move in lockstep.
Pregnancy and IBS
Pregnancy brings sustained high levels of progesterone, which inhibits smooth muscle contraction and slows gut motility considerably. Nearly a third of pregnant women experience increased constipation, particularly during the last trimester. [7]
Menopause and IBS
Two studies presented at the American College of Gastroenterology (ACG) 2024 Annual Scientific Meeting found that hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal women is associated with increased risk of developing IBS and gastric motility disorders, elevated GI symptoms, and greater medication use. [8]
"In the GI clinic that I work in, we see an increased population of women that come in with functional GI disorders, and I think there is a huge need for continued research really paying attention to what other things potentially could be contributing to this."
— Dr. Jacqueline Khalil, DO, Case Western Reserve University/MetroHealth, ACG 2024
Dr. Mark Pimentel, Executive Director of Cedars-Sinai's Medically Associated Science and Technology Program, has noted that women in menopause have a different gut microbiome compared to premenopausal women, and that HRT appears to make the microbiome look younger in composition, though the clinical significance for IBS is still being studied. [9]
Stress, Anxiety, and Trauma
Women with IBS report higher rates of anxiety, depression, and a history of trauma compared with men who have IBS.
Chronic stress elevates cortisol, and research by Heitkemper and colleagues found that cortisol was unusually elevated in women with IBS. A separate Italian study confirmed exaggerated cortisol activity in IBS patients compared to controls. [10]
This does not mean IBS is a psychological condition. It means the brain and gut are biologically connected, and that psychological state has real, measurable effects on gut physiology.
What Can Be Mistaken for IBS in Women?
Getting the right diagnosis matters. Several conditions share symptoms with IBS and are more likely to affect people assigned female at birth.
Researchers and clinicians consistently flag these conditions as common sources of misdiagnosis.
- Endometriosis: A 2025 randomized controlled trial from Monash University found that over 75 percent of people with endometriosis experience GI symptoms, including abdominal pain, bloating, and altered bowel habits. Of 160 women meeting IBS criteria at one specialist clinic, 36 percent had concurrent endometriosis. Endometriosis pain characteristically worsens around menstruation. [11]
- SIBO (Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth): Excess bacteria in the small intestine can produce bloating, pain, and altered bowel habits that closely mimic IBS. It is estimated that SIBO underlies a significant proportion of IBS cases and is diagnosed via a breath test.
- Celiac Disease: Gluten intolerance, triggered by an autoimmune reaction, can produce IBS-like symptoms. Celiac disease should be ruled out with a blood test before an IBS diagnosis is confirmed. [12]
- Pelvic Floor Dysfunction: Weakness or excessive tightness of the pelvic floor muscles can cause constipation, straining, and pelvic pain resembling IBS-C.
- Ovarian Cysts or Cancer: Persistent bloating, changes in bowel habits, and pelvic discomfort that is new or rapidly worsening should always be evaluated to exclude gynecological causes.
- IBD (Inflammatory Bowel Disease): Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis can present with abdominal pain and diarrhea similar to IBS, but involve visible inflammation and require entirely different treatment.
What Triggers IBS?
The Biggest Trigger: Stress
Stress is the most consistently reported trigger for IBS flare-ups in the clinical literature.
Activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis during stress elevates cortisol levels, which dysregulates gut motility and heightens visceral sensitivity.
A landmark study by Dr. Douglas Drossman and colleagues at UNC Chapel Hill, drawing on a national survey of 5,430 US households, found that IBS was more prevalent and more stress-sensitive in women than men during the reproductive years. [10]
Even anticipatory stress, such as worrying about a social event or a medical appointment, can trigger symptoms.
Chronic stress, anxiety, and unresolved trauma can physically rewire how the nervous system processes gut signals.
Foods That Trigger IBS
Triggers vary considerably from person to person, but the most widely reported ones include:
- High-FODMAP foods: fermentable carbohydrates in onions, garlic, wheat, beans, certain fruits, and lactose-containing dairy
- Fatty or fried foods, which slow gastric emptying and can provoke cramping
- Caffeine and alcohol, both of which stimulate intestinal contractions
- Carbonated drinks, which increase gas and bloating
- Artificial sweeteners such as sorbitol and mannitol
The low-FODMAP diet, developed by researchers at Monash University in Australia, is one of the most evidence-based dietary approaches for IBS.
In clinical trials, it has produced meaningful symptom improvement in 50 to 80 percent of IBS patients.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) recommends it as a second-line dietary intervention when general dietary advice is insufficient. [11]
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Hormonal Fluctuations
As described above, the sharp drop in estrogen and progesterone before menstruation is a consistent and well-documented trigger.
Tracking symptoms alongside the menstrual cycle can help identify patterns and guide both self-management and clinical decisions.
What Do IBS Stools Look Like?
IBS stool appearance varies by subtype.
Clinicians use the Bristol Stool Chart, a validated seven-point visual scale, to categorize stool consistency:
- Types 1 and 2 (hard lumps or a lumpy sausage shape): typical of IBS-C
- Types 3 and 4 (smooth, soft sausage or snake shape): considered normal
- Types 5, 6, and 7 (soft blobs, fluffy pieces, or watery liquid): typical of IBS-D
People with IBS-M may move between hard and loose stools, sometimes within the same day.
Stools in IBS do not typically contain blood.
If you notice rectal bleeding, significant amounts of mucus, unexplained weight loss, or symptoms that wake you from sleep, contact a healthcare provider promptly, as these are red flags that require investigation.
How to Treat an IBS Flare-Up
Medical Disclaimer
The strategies listed below are for general informational purposes only. They are not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before trying new remedies, supplements, or over-the-counter medications, especially if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, taking other medications, or managing another health condition.If your flare-up is severe, prolonged, or accompanied by fever, rectal bleeding, or significant weight loss, seek medical attention promptly.
Immediate Relief Strategies
When a flare strikes, the following approaches can ease symptoms in the short term:
- A heat pack or warm water bottle on the abdomen relaxes intestinal smooth muscle and reduces cramping
- Enteric-coated peppermint oil capsules have good randomized trial evidence for reducing abdominal pain and spasm
- Over-the-counter antispasmodics such as hyoscine butylbromide or mebeverine can help with cramping
- Loperamide can slow gut transit and reduce urgency during IBS-D flares
- Gentle movement, including walking or restorative yoga, helps relieve gas and stimulate normal motility
Medications for IBS in Women
Dr. Mindy Lee of Weill Cornell Medicine notes that certain medications work better in women than in men, including alosetron (a 5HT3 antagonist approved for women with severe IBS-D) and tegaserod (a 5HT4 agonist). [6]
Other prescription options include:
- Linaclotide and lubiprostone: Both approved for IBS-C. They increase fluid secretion in the gut to soften stools and reduce pain.
- Rifaximin: A non-absorbed antibiotic used in IBS-D, particularly when SIBO is suspected.
- Low-dose antidepressants: Tricyclics (such as nortriptyline or amitriptyline) or SSRIs at low doses reduce visceral hypersensitivity, independent of their effect on mood. They are supported by a body of clinical trial evidence. [7]
Prescription Medications: Important Notice
All medications listed in this section are prescription-only and must be prescribed and monitored by a licensed healthcare provider. Do not start, stop, or adjust any prescription medication without first speaking to your doctor. Some medications listed here (such as alosetron) carry specific risk warnings from the FDA and are only prescribed under restricted programs. This information is not intended to replace a consultation with a gastroenterologist or your primary care physician.
Gut-Brain Therapies
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and gut-directed hypnotherapy both have strong evidence for reducing IBS symptom severity, as recognized by the American College of Gastroenterology. [13]
"The most important thing is a willingness to work with your physician and try different treatments to see what works best for you. That may require a lot of patience. But IBS is something that can be controlled. With the right course of treatment, you can lead a normal life."
— Dr. Dasha Moza, MD, Gastroenterologist, Rochester Regional Health
How to Calm an Irritable Bowel Long-Term
General Wellness Information: Not Medical Advice
The lifestyle and supplement recommendations below reflect general evidence-based guidance and are not personalized medical advice.Individual responses to dietary changes, probiotics, and exercise vary widely. What works for one person may worsen symptoms for another. Before starting a restrictive diet such as the low-FODMAP diet, consult a registered dietitian experienced in gastrointestinal health. Unsupervised dietary restriction can lead to nutritional deficiencies. Speak with your doctor before adding any new supplement, including probiotics or fiber supplements, particularly if you are on medications or have other health conditions.
Lifestyle Changes
- Regular physical activity: A systematic review found that exercise significantly reduces IBS symptom severity and improves quality of life. Even 30 minutes of brisk walking most days is beneficial.
- Consistent sleep and wake times: circadian rhythm disruption affects gut motility, and poor sleep has been shown to worsen IBS symptoms
- Eating at regular intervals and chewing food thoroughly to reduce digestive load
- Stress management techniques including yoga, mindfulness meditation, and deep breathing lower overall activation of the gut-brain stress response
Probiotics and Fiber
Certain probiotic strains, particularly Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species, have shown benefit for bloating and overall symptom scores in some trials, though results across studies are inconsistent.
Because the gut microbiome is highly individual, finding the right probiotic may take trial and error under the guidance of a gastroenterologist or dietitian.
Soluble fiber supplements such as psyllium husk can help regulate bowel habits in both IBS-C and IBS-D.
Insoluble fiber, such as wheat bran, can worsen symptoms for some people and should be introduced cautiously.
Can Ozempic Make IBS Worse?
This question is increasingly common in clinical practice as GLP-1 receptor agonists such as semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) become more widely used for type 2 diabetes and weight management.
GLP-1 medications work partly by slowing gastric emptying.
For people with IBS, this can have unpredictable effects.
- Those with IBS-D may find that the slowed transit reduces urgency and loose stools.
- Those with IBS-C may find that constipation worsens.
Further, for anyone with IBS, the most common GLP-1 side effects, including nausea, bloating, and abdominal discomfort, can overlap with and be difficult to distinguish from an IBS flare. [14]
The key distinction is timing: GLP-1 side effects tend to be most prominent when starting the medication or after a dose increase and typically ease over a few weeks as the body adjusts.
True IBS flares are more closely tied to food triggers, stress, or hormonal changes.
Current evidence does not suggest that GLP-1 medications worsen the underlying IBS condition itself.
If you have IBS and are taking or considering a GLP-1 medication, tracking symptoms carefully and working closely with both your prescribing physician and a gastroenterologist is important for managing both sets of symptoms effectively.
lf You Are Currently Taking Ozempic or Another GLP-1 Medication
Do not stop taking your GLP-1 medication due to gastrointestinal symptoms without first consulting your prescribing physician. Stopping abruptly can have health consequences, particularly for people managing type 2 diabetes. GI side effects from GLP-1 drugs (nausea, bloating, constipation, or diarrhea) are common, especially when starting or increasing your dose, and often improve with time. If you have IBS and are concerned about how your medication is affecting your symptoms, ask your doctor for a referral to a gastroenterologist who can help you manage both conditions together. The information in this section reflects the current available evidence and is not a substitute for personalised medical guidance.
When to See a Doctor
IBS is diagnosed based on symptoms using the Rome IV criteria, but a healthcare provider must first rule out other conditions. See a doctor promptly if you experience any of the following:
- Blood in your stool or rectal bleeding
- Unexplained weight loss
- Symptoms that wake you from sleep
- New symptoms appearing after age 50
- A family history of colorectal cancer or IBD
- Symptoms that are progressively worsening
- Severe or persistent pelvic pain
These are recognized "red flag" symptoms by bodies including the American College of Gastroenterology and the UK's NICE guidelines, and they require clinical investigation to exclude more serious causes. [12]
Summary
- IBS is one of the most common gastrointestinal conditions in the world, and it affects women, including those assigned female at birth, at roughly twice the rate of men.
- Sex hormones, particularly estrogen and progesterone, directly modulate gut pain sensitivity, motility, and the gut-brain axis
- Women with IBS are more likely to experience constipation, bloating, nausea, fatigue, and overlapping conditions like endometriosis.
- Symptoms frequently shift with the menstrual cycle, through pregnancy, and into menopause.
- An accurate diagnosis is essential because several conditions, including endometriosis, SIBO, and celiac disease, can closely mimic IBS.
- The low-FODMAP diet, cognitive behavioral therapy, gut-directed hypnotherapy, targeted medications, and consistent lifestyle practices all have clinical evidence behind them. If
- IBS symptoms are disrupting your daily life, you do not have to manage them alone. A gastroenterologist who understands the female-specific aspects of this condition can help you find an approach that works.
Frequently Asked Questions
Short-term: a heat pack on the abdomen, enteric-coated peppermint oil capsules, over-the-counter antispasmodics, and gentle movement such as walking. Long-term, the most effective approaches combine dietary changes like the low-FODMAP diet, regular exercise, consistent sleep, and stress management techniques such as cognitive behavioral therapy or gut-directed hypnotherapy.
IBS stools vary by subtype. In IBS-C, stools are hard and difficult to pass (Types 1 to 2 on the Bristol Stool Chart). In IBS-D, they are soft, mushy, or watery (Types 5 to 7). In IBS-M, both can occur, sometimes on the same day. IBS stools should not contain blood. If you notice rectal bleeding, see a doctor.
Use heat on the abdomen, try peppermint oil capsules, and take an antispasmodic for cramping. For IBS-D flares, loperamide can reduce urgency. Avoid known food triggers, keep meals small and plain, and reduce stress where possible. If flares are frequent or severe, or accompanied by red flag symptoms, speak with your doctor about prescription options.
The most common triggers include high-FODMAP foods such as onions, garlic, wheat, beans, certain fruits, and dairy; fatty or fried foods; caffeine; alcohol; carbonated drinks; and artificial sweeteners like sorbitol. Triggers are highly individual. A food and symptom diary, ideally with dietitian support, is the best way to identify your personal patterns.
Stress is the most consistently reported trigger for IBS flare-ups across clinical research. The gut-brain connection means that psychological stress directly alters gut motility and pain sensitivity through the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, often causing or worsening symptoms in real time.
Several conditions commonly mimic IBS in women: endometriosis (which causes GI symptoms in over 75 percent of those affected), SIBO, celiac disease, pelvic floor dysfunction, ovarian cysts or cancer, and inflammatory bowel disease. A thorough medical evaluation, including blood tests and a review of symptom patterns, especially any cyclical worsening around menstruation, is needed to rule these out.
GLP-1 medications like Ozempic slow gastric emptying, which can cause nausea, bloating, and abdominal discomfort that resembles or overlaps with an IBS flare. For those with IBS-C, the slowed motility may worsen constipation. Current evidence suggests these medications do not worsen the underlying IBS condition, but their side effects can be difficult to distinguish from IBS symptoms. Side effects generally improve with time and dose adjustment. Careful symptom tracking and close collaboration with your medical team are recommended.
Medical Disclaimer
This article is intended for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The information presented here is based on published research and expert commentary available at the time of writing and is not a substitute for a consultation with a qualified healthcare professional. IBS and the conditions discussed in this article are complex and present differently in each person. Treatment decisions, including dietary changes, medications, and gut-brain therapies, should always be made in partnership with a licensed gastroenterologist, physician, or registered dietitian who can assess your individual circumstances. If you are experiencing symptoms that concern you, please seek medical attention. Do not delay or disregard professional medical advice based on anything you have read in this article. Medication information is current as of the publication date and may change. Always verify prescribing information with your healthcare provider or pharmacist.
References
[2] Sex-Gender Differences in Irritable Bowel Syndrome. PMC/NIH, World Journal of Gastroenterology.
[6] Lee M, MD. What Women Should Know About IBS. Weill Cornell Medicine.
[7] Moza D, MD. Treating IBS in Women. Rochester Regional Health.
[9] Pimentel M. Menopause, HRT and the Gut Microbiome. National Geographic, May 2025.
[10] Palsson OS, Whitehead WE. Hormones and IBS. UNC Center for Functional GI and Motility Disorders.
[12] Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS). Cleveland Clinic.
[13] Hong-Curtis JA, MD. Why Gastrointestinal Problems Often Affect Women Differently. Yale Medicine.
[14] Ozempic with IBS/IBD: Distinguishing Flares from GLP-1 Side Effects. Polar Bear Meds.
[15] Irritable Bowel Syndrome: Symptoms and Causes. Mayo Clinic.



