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Crohn’s Disease

Crohn’s Disease. By Michael Di Marino. Introduction. Is chronic inflammation on any part of the gastrointestinal tract It is most commonly developed in the small and large intestines The cause for this disease is unknown Is a very common disease now of days

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Crohn’s Disease

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  1. Crohn’s Disease By Michael Di Marino

  2. Introduction • Is chronic inflammation on any part of the gastrointestinal tract • It is most commonly developed in the small and large intestines • The cause for this disease is unknown • Is a very common disease now of days • People can live normal lives with this disease • Occurs in young teens (15) until mid age (35) is rare to have in childhood • Is known as an inflammatory bowel disease (IBD)

  3. The history behind Crohn’s • Was discovered by Burril B. Crohn • He was an American physician • He first discover this disease in 1932 And it was named after him in the 1950s

  4. Causes • The cause is really unknown, but is suspected to be by… • Immune system • Is caused by a virus or bacterium • Your immune system fights off invading micro organisms, which leads to your digestive tract to become inflamed • Hereditary • 20% of people with crohn’s disease have someone close to them with the disease. • It is a mutation in the gene NOD2 • Lack • Of proteins, calories, and vitamins, • Absorption in the intestines • Nutriention

  5. Complications • Blockage of the intestines • It starts to thicken the intestinal wall with swelling and scar tissue • Can cause things such as … • Fistulae • Abscesses • And intestinal bleeding • As well as ulcers • If children develop it, it causes delayed development and stunted growth.

  6. Fistulae • Is an abnormal tube-like passage in the tissue • This allows fluid to drain out of the intestine and into another part of the body. • So this means that the bacteria that live in your intestines are able to infect other areas of the body

  7. Abscess • Another complication from Crohn’s disease is Abscess • It is a pocket like infection within the tissue • It creates an area of puss around the area of infection. • This is potentially deadly • This can cause fever, and severe abdominal pain

  8. Symptoms • Diarrhea- caused by the lack of absorption due to the inflamed rectum. • abdominal cramp- caused by inflammation • Lower grade fever • Bloody/black tar like stool • Nausea • General feeling of ill/weakness • Anal abscesses • Mouth or skin lesion • Blood clots • Fatigue • Joint pain • Enteric arthritis- pain moves from one joint to another, even affecting the spine • Painful eye conditions which cause visual difficulties

  9. Symptoms cont… • Can happen anywhere in the large and small intestine • Mostly occurs in the ileum for the small intestine • And mostly occurs in the colon for the large intestine.

  10. How to diagnosis • It is very hard to diagnosis this disease, because it shows many symptoms of other intestinal disorders • When the disease is suspected they test patients many ways. • Barium x-ray (patients drink barium before an X-ray so that it coats the lining of the small intestine and if the barium shows, it means where the inflammation is in the intestine . • Ct scan of the intestine • Colonoscopy- where they stick a tube with a camera on the end of it, into your anus so they can make it to your colon and see what is happening in there. • Capsule endoscope

  11. Risk factors • Age- most are diagnosed between 15- 35 years • Ethnicity- Caucasian have the highest risk of getting this disease. While Europeans and Jewish descendents are 4 to 5 times for likely to have this disease. • Family history- If someone in your family has this disease, you have a 30 times higher chance of getting it • Where you live- People in urban or industries country, are more likely to developed it. • Smoking- increases getting this disease. And if you continue smoking when you are having treatment, it decrease the effectiveness of that treatment.

  12. Treatment • There is NO cure for crohn’s disease • Treatments help in lessening the recurring attacks • Medications Antidiarrheal- cures diarrhea/ abdominal cramps Corticosteroids- reduces inflammation in flare ups Nourishment- taking vitamins (such as B12) Drugs containing- mesalamine Anti-tumor necrosis Diet- eat food with high protein and calories to increase your nutrients • It also depends on location and severity of the disease But when worse comes to worse there is always … Surgery

  13. Surgery • Is an immediate relief of pain from the disease • This does not cure the disease though • If in the small intestine, they remove the infected site • After surgery, it returns to an area right next to the one you just had removed • It is not a good idea to always have surgery • If in the Large Intestine, a colostomy is done… this is were they remove the whole large intestine.

  14. Facts • This disease effects males and females equally • The inflammation is really a defense system for our body • 70% of all patients get one operation at one point in life • It is unknown what really causes Crohn’s disease

  15. Future outlook • There is no Cure for Crohn’s disease • People with this disease can live normal, and full lives. • Associations such as National Institute of Diabetes and kidney disease are involved in finding a cure for this disease.

  16. Cited http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/images/ency/fullsize/19219.jpg http://www.medgadget.com/archives/img/crohn.jpg http://odddiseases.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/01/crohns-disease.jpg http://www.choa.org/images/illustrations/Endoscopic_Procedure.gif http://www.mssm.edu/library/services/archives/archives_collections/images/crohn.jpg http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/images/ency/fullsize/19220.jpg http://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/dynamicImages/chromomap/nod2.jpeg http://medicalimages.allrefer.com/large/anorectal-fistulas.jpg http://www.healthline.com/images/staywell/5903.jpg http://img.tfd.com/dorland/thumbs/abscess.jpg Bunch,bryan.(2003),cohn’s disease.”Diseases” (vol.2,pp116-118)Danbury: Scientific Publishing, Inc. Lawson, David. Mayo clinic Family health book. New York: William Morrow and company,inc. www.Medicinenet.com/crohns_disease/article.htm www.Myoclinic.com/health/crohns-disease/ds00104 www.faqs.org/heath/sick-V1/Crohn-s-Disease.html www.healthnewsflash.com/conditions/crohns_disease.htm

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