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Constipation and Gut-Directed Hypnotherapy: Why Your Gut Is Listening to Your Nervous System

Most people who come to me describing chronic constipation have already done the sensible things. They have adjusted their diet, increased fibre, reduced processed foods, tried magnesium supplements and probiotics. Some have been through several rounds of laxatives. A number have had colonoscopies that returned entirely normal results, which should have been reassuring, but in practice left them feeling more confused than before.

If the gut is structurally intact and the diet is reasonable, why isn’t it working?

The answer, in a growing number of cases, lies not in the bowel itself but in the relationship between the gut and the brain, and in the way the nervous system has learned to regulate, or more accurately to suppress, normal digestive movement. This is the clinical territory that gut-directed hypnotherapy is specifically designed to address, and it is why, for clients with chronic or functional constipation that has not responded to conventional approaches, it often produces results that those approaches could not.

This article explains what is actually happening when constipation becomes a persistent functional problem, why the nervous system is usually involved, and how gut-directed hypnotherapy at London Hypnotics approaches it.

IBS SIBO BRAIN AXIS

What We Mean by Functional Constipation

Constipation is one of the most common gastrointestinal complaints in the UK, affecting an estimated one in seven adults and disproportionately affecting women. In clinical terms, it is generally defined as fewer than three bowel movements per week, combined with one or more of the following: hard or lumpy stools, straining, a sensation of incomplete evacuation, or a sense of blockage.

There are constipation presentations with clear structural or pharmacological causes: thyroid disorders, certain medications, pelvic floor dysfunction, or anatomical abnormalities. These require their own clinical management and are not the primary focus here.

The more clinically complex group, and the one most relevant to this post, is functional constipation and the constipation-predominant subtype of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS-C). These presentations involve a demonstrably normal bowel on investigation, yet persistent and often debilitating symptoms. What they share is a disruption in the communication between the central nervous system and the enteric nervous system, the vast neural network that lines the gastrointestinal tract and governs its function.

This disruption is the mechanism that gut-directed hypnotherapy is designed to address.


The Gut-Brain Axis: Why Your Bowel Is Not Independent

The enteric nervous system contains approximately 500 million neurons and has long been informally described as the “second brain.” While it can operate with some degree of autonomy, it is in constant bidirectional communication with the central nervous system via the vagus nerve and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis.

This communication means that the state of the central nervous system, including its emotional tone, its stress load, and its level of arousal or suppression, has a direct and measurable impact on how the gut functions. The research in this area has developed substantially over the past two decades. We now understand that stress hormones, particularly cortisol and CRH (corticotropin-releasing hormone), directly affect gut motility, intestinal permeability, and the sensitivity of gut neurons to normal stimuli.

For constipation specifically, the relevant mechanism is this: sustained sympathetic nervous system activation, the physiological state associated with stress, anxiety, and chronic vigilance, actively suppresses intestinal motility. The digestive system is, in evolutionary terms, a non-essential function during threat response. Blood flow is redirected, muscular contractions slow, and the smooth muscle of the colon reduces its activity. The body is preparing to run or fight, not digest.

When that state becomes chronic rather than episodic, the suppression of gut motility can become entrenched. The nervous system is no longer responding to an acute stressor; it is simply operating at a baseline of elevated sympathetic tone. The colon continues to function sluggishly, not because anything is structurally wrong with it, but because the regulatory system governing its movement has become miscalibrated.

This is often the clinical picture I see in clients presenting with chronic constipation alongside anxiety, sleep difficulties, or a history of sustained stress: a nervous system that has been running at high arousal for so long that the digestive system’s normal rhythms have been persistently disrupted.


Why Dietary Changes Alone Often Fall Short

I want to be clear that dietary adjustment is not irrelevant. Adequate fibre, hydration, and reducing excess ultra-processed foods are clinically reasonable first steps and appropriate guidance from a GP or dietitian. The low-FODMAP diet has a meaningful evidence base for IBS presentations and can significantly reduce the fermentable substrates that contribute to bloating and discomfort in IBS-C.

But diet acts on the content and chemical environment of the bowel. It does not recalibrate the nervous system’s regulation of gut motility.

This is why many clients with functional constipation experience partial improvement on dietary changes and then plateau. They have optimised the inputs, but the underlying dysregulation of the gut-brain axis persists. The colon is still receiving the same dysregulated signals from a nervous system that has not been reset.

It is also worth noting that laxatives and stool softeners, while useful for short-term relief, do not address the neurological underpinnings of functional constipation. For many people, they become a long-term dependency rather than a curative intervention, because the mechanism generating the constipation remains unchanged.


The Psychological Dimension: What Constipation and Anxiety Share

There is a well-documented bidirectional relationship between constipation and psychological distress. Anxiety and chronic stress increase sympathetic nervous system dominance, which suppresses gut motility. Conversely, the experience of chronic constipation, the discomfort, the uncertainty, the disruption to daily life, generates its own anxiety and creates what clinicians recognise as a self-sustaining cycle.

Many clients with long-standing functional constipation have also developed a hypervigilant relationship with their body in relation to the bowel: monitoring closely for signs of movement, interpreting normal sensations with alarm, planning social and professional activities around toilet access, and carrying a low-level anticipatory dread of bad days. This hypervigilance is entirely understandable, but it maintains the elevated arousal state that suppresses the very function they are hoping to restore.

I see parallels here with other presentations where subconscious threat responses become embedded: panic attacks, sleep disorders, and stress-related pain syndromes. In each case, the nervous system is doing something it was designed to do, but in a context and at a frequency that was never intended.

The clinical insight that has made gut-directed hypnotherapy so effective for IBS and functional gut disorders is precisely this: if the nervous system is generating the problem, then working with the nervous system is the most direct route to resolution.


How Gut-Directed Hypnotherapy Works for Constipation

Gut-directed hypnotherapy was originally developed by Professor Peter Whorwell at the University of Manchester in the 1980s and has since accumulated one of the strongest evidence bases in the field of functional gastroenterology. It is now referenced in NICE guidance for IBS, and the Whorwell protocol is the benchmark against which newer approaches are measured.

The approach uses a focused state of deep relaxation, the hypnotic state, to access and influence the subconscious processes that regulate gut function. It is not simply relaxation, though relaxation is part of the mechanism. It is a therapeutic process that directly engages the gut-brain axis through a combination of physiological downregulation, targeted therapeutic suggestion, and imagery specifically designed to influence the enteric nervous system.

Here is how that process unfolds in a clinical context focused on constipation.

Recalibrating the Autonomic Nervous System

The hypnotic state is a potent activator of the parasympathetic nervous system, the physiological counterpart to the stress response. Research has documented measurable reductions in heart rate, respiratory rate, cortisol levels, and sympathetic nervous system activity during hypnosis. For a digestive system that has been operating under chronic sympathetic suppression, repeated access to deep parasympathetic activation begins to provide what dietary changes alone cannot: a genuine recalibration of the regulatory baseline.

As the nervous system’s resting tone shifts over the course of sessions, many clients notice that their digestive rhythm begins to normalise even before any specific gut-focused work has been completed. This reflects the direct impact of nervous system recalibration on colonic motility.

Direct Gut-Specific Therapeutic Suggestion

Within the hypnotic state, therapeutic suggestion is used to directly address the function of the gut. Drawing on the Whorwell protocol, this involves guided imagery and metaphor designed to influence the smooth muscle activity of the colon, the coordination of peristalsis, and the subconscious signals governing transit time.

Clients may be guided, for example, to visualise normal, comfortable gut movement, to develop a felt sense of ease and rhythm in the digestive system, or to update their relationship with gut sensations from one of alarm to one of trust and normalcy. These images and suggestions are not decorative. They are clinical tools that work on the enteric nervous system via the same pathways through which psychological stress disrupts it.

Reducing Visceral Hypersensitivity

Visceral hypersensitivity, an abnormally heightened sensitivity to gut sensations, is common in IBS-C and functional constipation. Clients often describe discomfort at levels of bowel distension that would not register as painful in the general population. This hypersensitivity is neurologically mediated and contributes significantly to the distress associated with the condition.

Gut-directed hypnotherapy has been shown in clinical research to reduce visceral hypersensitivity, particularly in IBS presentations. The mechanism involves both the direct neurological effect of the hypnotic state and the therapeutic reinterpretation of gut signals from threatening to neutral or informative. Over the course of treatment, clients typically find that gut sensations that previously triggered anxiety and avoidance become manageable and eventually unremarkable.

Addressing the Anxiety Around the Bowel

A meaningful part of the clinical work with constipation involves the psychological dimension specifically: the hypervigilance, the anticipatory anxiety, the planning and avoidance behaviours that have grown up around the condition. These maintain the elevated nervous system arousal that suppresses motility, and they erode quality of life independently of the physical symptoms.

Using Ericksonian techniques, we work within the hypnotic state to gently reduce the emotional significance the subconscious has attached to gut sensations and bowel function. This is not dismissing the client’s distress; it is working at the level where that distress is generated and maintained. Clients often describe a shift in their general relationship with their body in relation to the gut: from watchful and adversarial, to more trusting and settled.


What the Research Tells Us

The evidence base for gut-directed hypnotherapy in IBS and functional gut disorders is one of the most developed in the field of complementary and integrative medicine, and its application to constipation-predominant presentations specifically is well supported.

Whorwell and colleagues published the first randomised controlled trial of gut-directed hypnotherapy for IBS in 1984, with striking results. Subsequent trials have replicated these findings, with studies consistently reporting significant improvements in bowel frequency, stool consistency, abdominal pain, bloating, and psychological wellbeing following a standard course of gut-directed hypnotherapy.

A landmark study by Palsson et al. (2002), published in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, demonstrated significant improvements in global IBS symptoms, quality of life, and psychological distress in patients treated with a gut-directed hypnotherapy protocol, with effects maintained at twelve-month follow-up. The durability of treatment response is a particularly important finding, distinguishing gut-directed hypnotherapy from symptomatic interventions.

Research by Lea et al. (2003), published in Gut, found that gut-directed hypnotherapy produced significant improvement across all IBS subtypes, with constipation-predominant presentations showing particularly robust response in terms of bowel frequency and ease of defecation.

Gonsalkorale and Whorwell (2005) reviewed the long-term outcomes of over 200 IBS patients treated with gut-directed hypnotherapy and found that 83% of patients who had responded to treatment maintained their improvement at follow-up periods of up to five years. This level of long-term durability is unusual in the management of functional gut disorders.

More recently, a systematic review by Lee et al. (2014) confirmed that gut-directed hypnotherapy produces significant reductions in IBS symptom severity scores, comparable in magnitude to other established pharmacological and psychological interventions, with the additional advantage of sustained response without the side effect profile associated with medication.

These findings inform my clinical approach and my confidence in recommending gut-directed hypnotherapy as a primary intervention for clients with IBS-C and functional constipation who have not found adequate resolution through conventional means.


What to Expect at London Hypnotics

I hold a specialist qualification in gut-directed hypnotherapy through the IBS Hypno Diploma, which focuses specifically on treating IBS and functional gastrointestinal conditions. My practice at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY, receives referrals from gastroenterology consultants at OneWelbeck and The London Clinic, and this specialist focus means that gut presentations are not a peripheral part of what I do but a clinical area I work in regularly.

The first session begins with a thorough clinical conversation. Constipation and IBS-C present differently for every person, and I want to understand yours specifically: when symptoms began, what your bowel pattern typically looks like, whether stress or anxiety has been a feature, what dietary and medical approaches you have tried, and how the condition has affected your daily life. This understanding shapes the therapeutic plan.

I use an Ericksonian approach alongside the Whorwell-based protocol: indirect, permissive, and tailored to you as an individual rather than applied as a generic script. For clients who are sceptical about complementary approaches, or who have not previously encountered hypnotherapy, this approach tends to feel more collaborative and less prescriptive than they anticipated.

For IBS-C and functional constipation, most clients complete a course of six to eight sessions, consistent with the evidence base. Changes in bowel frequency and general digestive ease often become apparent across the middle sessions, with consolidation and reduction in anxiety around the gut continuing through the latter part of the course. Sessions are available in person at 364 City Road, a short walk from Angel and Old Street stations, and online for clients who prefer to work from home.


Frequently Asked Questions

Is gut-directed hypnotherapy evidence-based? Yes. Gut-directed hypnotherapy is referenced in NICE guidance for IBS and has one of the most robust evidence bases of any psychological intervention for functional gut disorders. The Whorwell protocol, developed at the University of Manchester, has been evaluated in multiple randomised controlled trials over four decades, with consistently positive outcomes for IBS-C and related presentations.

Can gut-directed hypnotherapy help if I have been diagnosed with IBS-C rather than just constipation? Yes. IBS-C is one of the primary presentations for which gut-directed hypnotherapy was originally developed and validated. The protocol addresses the full cluster of IBS-C symptoms: bowel frequency, stool consistency, abdominal discomfort, bloating, and the anxiety that often accompanies the condition. Research specifically on IBS-C subtypes supports robust and durable response.

Do I need a GP referral? No, though I always recommend informing your GP that you are pursuing gut-directed hypnotherapy, and I am always willing to liaise with treating clinicians where appropriate. If you have not had a medical investigation of your constipation and have not been formally assessed by a doctor, it is clinically sensible to ensure a structural or medical cause has been ruled out before pursuing hypnotherapy specifically.

How is this different from just relaxation? Relaxation is a component of the mechanism, but gut-directed hypnotherapy is considerably more targeted than general relaxation. Within the hypnotic state, specific therapeutic suggestions, imagery, and interventions are directed at the gut-brain axis and at the function of the colon specifically. This targeted work is what produces the clinical results documented in the research literature. A relaxation recording does not do the same thing.

What if I have constipation alongside other IBS symptoms? This is the most common clinical picture. IBS rarely presents as a single symptom, and constipation in IBS-C is usually accompanied by bloating, cramping, incomplete evacuation, and variability in symptoms across days. The gut-directed hypnotherapy protocol is designed for this full symptom picture. You can read more about IBS presentations and gut-directed hypnotherapy in the related posts on IBS and SIBO and gut-directed hypnotherapy in London.

Can hypnotherapy help with the anxiety that has built up around my gut symptoms? Yes, and addressing this is a central part of the clinical work. The anxiety that develops around gut symptoms, the monitoring, the anticipatory dread, the social and professional planning around bowel access, contributes directly to maintaining the nervous system dysregulation that suppresses motility. Reducing that anxiety is not simply a quality-of-life benefit; it is a core component of restoring normal gut function.


Taking the Next Step

Chronic constipation that has not responded to dietary or pharmacological approaches is not a sign that nothing more can be done. For many people, it is a sign that the approach has been focused on the wrong level. The gut-brain axis is where the problem lives, and it is where the most effective solutions tend to be found.

If you are in London or anywhere in the UK and would like to explore whether gut-directed hypnotherapy is the right approach for you, I offer a free initial telephone consultation. There is no obligation and no pressure to proceed.

You can reach me at 020 7101 3284 or book a free consultation via the link below.

Book Your Free Consultation


Antonios Koletsas is a GHSC-registered and GHR-accredited clinical hypnotherapist practising at 364 City Road, London EC1V 2PY. He holds the IBS Hypno Diploma and specialises in gut-directed hypnotherapy for IBS, functional constipation, and related gut-brain axis conditions. He is trained in Ericksonian Hypnotherapy at BHRTI under Stephen Brooks.

Clinical References

Gonsalkorale, W. M., & Whorwell, P. J. (2005). Hypnotherapy in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome. European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology, 17(1), 15–20.

Lea, R., Houghton, L. A., Calvert, E. L., Larder, S., H077, N. W., Whorwell, P. J., & Bankart, J. (2003). Gut-focused hypnotherapy normalises disordered rectal sensitivity in patients with irritable bowel syndrome. Alimentary Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 17(5), 635–642.

Lee, H. H., Choi, Y. Y., & Choi, M. G. (2014). The efficacy of hypnotherapy in the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Neurogastroenterology and Motility, 20(2), 152–162.

NICE (2017). Irritable bowel syndrome in adults: diagnosis and management. Clinical Guideline CG61. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

Palsson, O. S., Turner, M. J., Johnson, D. A., Burnett, C. K., & Whitehead, W. E. (2002). Hypnosis treatment for severe irritable bowel syndrome: investigation of mechanism and effects on symptoms. Digestive Diseases and Sciences, 47(11), 2605–2614.

Whorwell, P. J., Prior, A., & Faragher, E. B. (1984). Controlled trial of hypnotherapy in the treatment of severe refractory irritable-bowel syndrome. Lancet, 2(8414), 1232–1234.

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