NEWLY DIAGNOSED
YOU HAVE IBD?...NOW WHAT?
You just left the doctor’s office and he told you that you have Crohn’s Disease or Ulcerative Colitis. It was a fifteen minute appointment, you were given some medication, and told to return for a follow up visit in three months. You have a million questions, but you did not have a chance to ask a single one. The information on the internet just confuses you more.
Here is what you need to know:
- “Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)” is a general term that includes two disease--Crohn’s disease and Ulcerative Colitis. These two diseases are similar, but have some major differences (see below). Both cause similar symptoms, the most common ones are abdominal pain, diarrhoea, rectal bleeding, and weight loss. Some people have only one symptom, some have many. Some people have mild disease while others have severe symptoms which can significantly interfere with their lives.
- People with Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis have inflammation of the intestinal tract. The easiest way to think of inflammation is to think of an infected finger....it gets red, swollen, and irritated. Inflammation is usually the result of the body fighting an infection. Our white blood cells attack the infection (usually a bacteria or a virus) by releasing chemicals called “cytokines” that kill the infecting organisms. But these cytokines also injure our own tissues in the process, resulting in redness and swelling. Eventually the body gets rid of the infection and the inflammation resolves.
In Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis there is no infection. For unknown reasons, the body attacks the intestines as if they were infected. White blood cells release these cytokines and the lining of the intestinal tract (called the mucosa) becomes inflamed. Usually when people first present with symptoms, the doctor will want to check for infections since they can produce identical symptoms. But infections usually resolve in a week or two. Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis, on the other hand, are chronic, which simply means that they last for a long time. The inflamed intestines can be seen at the time of a colonoscopy. The lining (mucosa) becomes red (the medical term is “erythematous”), can bleed easily (called “friable”), and have ulcers (an ulcer just means an area where the mucosa has eroded away. They look like little craters).
- Your intestinal tract includes your oesophagus (feeding tube), stomach, small intestine (about 7 metres long and divided into sections called the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum), and large intestine (also called the colon, which is about 1.5 metres long). In medical language when there is inflammation, doctors add the ending “itis”. So, for example, “colitis” means inflammation of the colon and “ileitis” means inflammation of the ileum. The only exceptions are inflammation of the rectum, which is called “proctitis, and inflammation of the stomach, which is called “gastritis”.
Ulcerative Colitis is a disease that only affects the colon (which is why it is called Ulcerative COLITIS). Only a section of the colon may be inflamed or the entire colon can be involved. When just the rectum is inflamed, it is called ulcerative proctitis. When the entire colon is involved, it is sometimes called pan-ulcerative colitis. Usually the more colon that is involved, the worse the symptoms.
Crohn’s disease, on the other hand, can affect any part of the intestinal tract. The most common areas that are affected are the colon and the end of the small intestine, the ileum. Therefore, some people will have Crohn’s colitis, some will have Crohn’s ileitis, and some will have both Crohn’s colitis and ileitis.
In addition to the inflammation in the intestinal tract, people with IBD can occasionally get symptoms causes by inflammation in other parts of the body. Some people can develop arthritis, skin rashes, inflammation of the liver, and eye infections. These “extra-intestinal manifestations” are relatively uncommon.
- How common are these diseases? Very common. It is estimated that there are between 15-20,000 people with IBD in New Zealand. While symptoms can present at any age, most people are diagnosed in early adulthood. But the the disease can affect young children as well in the very elderly. What causes people to get IBD is unknown.
TESTS YOUR DOCTOR MIGHT ORDER AND WHY
Prior to making a diagnosis and after a diagnosis of IBD is made, there are several tests your doctor may order.
COMMON LABORATORY TESTS
CBC
ALBUMIN
CRP
Faecal (stool) Calprotectin
Stool Cultures
ENDOSCOPIES
Endoscopies are tests using flexible tubes with a light and a TV camera in the tip which show the inside lining of the intestines. After checking blood and stool tests, most doctors will want to do one of these exams as they are the best tests to diagnose IBD or to evaluate whether you are experiencing a flare. Samples of the lining of the intestine (biopsies) can be taken and checked under a microscope to help make the diagnosis.
Colonoscopy
Flexible Sigmoidoscopy
Gastroscopy
Capsule Endoscopy
XRAYS
Another way to see if there is involvement of Crohn’s disease in the small intestine above the level that can be seen with a colonoscope is with a special CT scan or MRI of the small intestine. A CT scan is a sophisticated xray which uses a computer to generate the xray picture. If a segment of the small intestine is inflamed, the wall will looked thickened. An MRI is a similar study that uses a magnet to generate the picture. It has the advantage that there is no xray exposure.