# Reconceptualizing negative endoscopy as a positive contextual indicator for disorders of gut-brain interaction

**Authors:** Wumiao Zhang, He Zeng, Qian-Nan Ruan, Dakai Zeng

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2026.1795494 · Frontiers in Physiology · 2026-03-12

## TL;DR

This paper suggests that a negative endoscopy can actually help diagnose gut-brain interaction disorders when combined with other clinical data.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a new clinical workflow, the 'Affirm-Explain-Transform' model, to reframe negative endoscopy results as diagnostic tools.

## Key findings

- A negative endoscopy can be a positive indicator for Disorders of Gut-Brain Interaction when combined with clinical history and biopsies.
- The 'Affirm-Explain-Transform' model is proposed to convert negative endoscopy results into therapeutic tools.
- The paper outlines physiological and psychological mechanisms supporting the reclassification of negative endoscopy results.

## Abstract

In the contemporary landscape of gastroenterology, the “negative” endoscopy—an examination revealing no gross structural, mucosal, or biochemical abnormalities—is frequently perceived by both clinicians and patients as a diagnostic non-event, a failure to identify a cause, or an ambiguous dead-end. This perspective paper argues for a fundamental epistemological and clinical paradigm shift: a negative endoscopic result, when combined with appropriate biopsy protocols and clinical history, should not be classified merely as the absence of organic disease but as positive, corroborative evidence acting as a contextual indicator supporting a diagnosis of a Disorder of Gut-Brain Interaction (DGBI). By integrating the verified absence of macroscopic “hardware” damage (structural pathology) with the presence of characteristic symptom patterns, clinicians can support the diagnosis of a “software” malfunction (visceral hypersensitivity and altered central processing). This report provides a detailed analysis of the physiological mechanisms of the brain-gut axis that underpin this argument, dissects the psychological impact of diagnostic labeling versus invalidation, and proposes a comprehensive novel clinical workflow—the “Affirm-Explain-Transform” (AET) model—to convert the negative endoscopy from a source of clinical ambiguity into a potent therapeutic tool.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** disorders of (MESH:D009358), DGBI (MESH:D001927), visceral hypersensitivity (MESH:D004342), organic disease (MESH:D000092124)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

27 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017317/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13017317