If you live with IBS, you have probably noticed that stress makes your symptoms worse, even when your diet hasn’t changed. That’s not a coincidence. The gut-brain axis, the constant two-way communication between your digestive system and your nervous system, plays a central role in how IBS shows up and how it can be treated.
What Is the Gut-Brain Axis?
The gut-brain axis is the biological communication network linking your gut and your brain via the vagus nerve, hormones, and the immune system. Your gut has its own nervous system, often called the “second brain,” made up of over 500 million neurons lining the digestive tract. This enteric nervous system constantly sends signals up to your brain and receives signals back down. In fact, a large majority of that communication travels upward from gut to brain rather than the other way round, which is part of why gut health has such a strong influence on mood, focus, and general wellbeing.

How Does the Gut-Brain Axis Affect IBS Symptoms?
In people with IBS, this communication system tends to be oversensitive. The gut may send stronger pain and discomfort signals to the brain than it should, a phenomenon known as visceral hypersensitivity. At the same time, stress signals from the brain can speed up or slow down gut movement, contributing to bloating, cramping, or irregular bowel habits. This helps explain why IBS often flares during stressful periods, exams, travel, or emotional upheaval, even without a change in diet. It also explains why so many people with IBS also experience anxiety or low mood, since the same pathway carries signals both ways.
Why Doesn’t Diet Alone Fix IBS for Everyone?
Many people with IBS spend years adjusting their diet, cutting out FODMAPs, gluten, or dairy, often with only partial relief. This is because diet addresses one part of the picture, what’s happening inside the gut, but not the sensitivity of the gut-brain signalling itself. If the nervous system is interpreting normal digestive activity as painful or urgent, even a “clean” diet won’t fully resolve symptoms. This is why clinical guidelines increasingly recommend psychological approaches alongside dietary changes for people whose symptoms persist.
Can Hypnotherapy Help Regulate the Gut-Brain Axis?
Yes. Gut-directed hypnotherapy works specifically on this brain-gut communication pathway. Using guided relaxation and targeted suggestion, it helps calm the nervous system’s response to gut signals, reducing the oversensitivity that drives IBS pain and irregularity. Sessions typically involve deep relaxation combined with visualisation techniques aimed directly at normalising gut function and reducing pain perception. Rather than addressing symptoms in isolation, it works on the underlying signalling loop between gut and brain, which is why many people see improvements in both physical symptoms and the anxiety that often accompanies them.
How Many Sessions Does Gut-Directed Hypnotherapy Usually Take?
Most gut-directed hypnotherapy programmes run over a course of six to twelve sessions, often delivered weekly. This mirrors the structure used in the clinical trials behind the approach, where consistency over several weeks allows the nervous system to gradually recalibrate. Some people notice changes in symptom severity within the first few sessions, while for others the improvement builds more steadily over the full course. Online sessions follow the same structure and have shown comparable results to in-person work, which makes this a realistic option for people outside London.
What Does the Research Say About Gut-Directed Hypnotherapy?
Gut-directed hypnotherapy has one of the strongest evidence bases of any psychological treatment for IBS. Clinical guidelines recognise it as an effective option for people who haven’t responded fully to standard dietary or medical approaches, and meta-analyses have found meaningful, lasting improvement in symptom severity and quality of life, with benefits maintained for months after treatment ends in many cases. For workplaces looking to support employees with gut health issues, our Calm Gut Programme applies these same principles in a corporate setting.
Key Takeaways
- The gut-brain axis is a two-way communication system between the digestive system and the nervous system.
- In IBS, this system becomes oversensitive, amplifying pain signals and disrupting normal gut function.
- Diet alone often can’t resolve IBS because it doesn’t address gut-brain signalling sensitivity.
- Gut-directed hypnotherapy targets this communication loop rather than just managing symptoms.
- A typical course runs six to twelve sessions, with online and in-person options showing similar results.
If IBS is affecting your daily life and you’d like a calm, evidence-based approach to managing it, Antonios offers gut-directed hypnotherapy both in person in Angel, London, and online for those elsewhere. Book a free consultation to find out whether it’s the right fit for you.
References
- [1] National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE). Irritable bowel syndrome in adults: diagnosis and management (CG61). https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg61
- [2] Schaefert R, Klose P, Moser G, Häuser W, 2014. Efficacy, tolerability, and safety of hypnosis in adult irritable bowel syndrome: systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychosomatic Medicine. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24804886/
- [3] NHS. Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/irritable-bowel-syndrome-ibs/






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