Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Basics
Basics
Basics
Description
Description
- Idiopathic, chronic inflammatory diseases of intestines, which can involve extraintestinal sites as well
- Differentiation between ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn disease is not always clear; intermediate forms of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) exist
- May present as initial onset of disease or exacerbation of existing disease
- Maintain high index of suspicion owing to frequent, subtle presentation of Crohn disease
- Pediatric considerations:
- Can occur in first few years of life
- Extraintestinal manifestations may predominate
- Differences between Crohn and UC:
- Rectum almost always involved in UC with continuous inflammation proximally
- Small intestine is not involved in UC
- Crohn can occur anywhere from mouth to anus, often with normal GI tract segments between affected areas
- Crohn involves transmural inflammation, whereas UC is confined to submucosa
- Similarities between Crohn and UC:
- Higher rate of colon cancer with disease >10 yr
- Bimodal age distribution, with early peak between teens and early 30s and second peak about age 60 yr
- Crohn disease clinical pattern:
- Ileocecal: ∼40%
- Small bowel: ∼30%
- Colon: ∼25%
- Other: ∼5%
- UC clinical pattern on presentation:
- Pancolitis: 30%
- Most severe clinical course
- Proctitis or proctosigmoiditis: 30%
- Relatively mild clinical course
- Left-sided colitis (up to splenic flexure): 40%
Etiology
Etiology
- Unknown
- Crohn disease and UC are separate entities with common genetic predisposition
- A positive family history is very common
- Multifactorial origin involving interplay among the following factors:
- Genetic
- Environmental
- Immune
- Pathogenesis:
- Gut wall becomes unable to downregulate its immune responses, ultimately resulting in chronic inflammation
- There is no definitive evidence for the etiologic role of infectious agents
- Psychogenic factors may play a role in some symptomatic exacerbations
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