IBD (Chron's Disease & Ulcerative Colitis) Flashcards

1
Q

Ulcerative colitis affects what region of the digestive tract?

A

Continuous lesion in colon and rectum

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2
Q

Crohn’s Disease affects what region of the digestive tract?

A

Discontinuous lesions in any part of the GI tract

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3
Q

Which is more likely to have nutritional deficiencies; CD or UC? Which is more likely to have colorectal cancer?

A

nutritional deficiencies-Crohn’s Disease

colorectal cancer - both but higher risk with ulcerative colitis

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4
Q

Common IBD Symptoms and characteristics unique to CD

A

pain, cramping, nocturnal diarrhea, urgency, bleeding, fatigue, weight loss
CD-abdominal mass, pain, fistula, ulcers, abscess

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5
Q

Which is more likely to relapse? CD or UC?

A

20% mild UC cases remiss within weeks with tx
vs
20% CD cases relapse annually

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6
Q

Drug classes used for IBD

A

5-ASA( Sulfasalazine, mesalazine aka mesalamine)
Corticosteroids (Prednisone, budesonide)
Antibiotics (Antimycobacterial agents, metronidazole, ciprofloxacin)
For severe IBD when the above don’t work
Immunosuppressives ( Azathioprine, 6-mercaptopurine, methotrexate)
Biologics (Infliximab, adalimumab, certolizumab, natalizumab)

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7
Q

Mesalazine aka Mesalamine products

A

Asacol tabs
Pentasa tabs
Salofalk Pentasa Enema or suppository

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8
Q

Sulfasalazine products

A

tabs

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9
Q

mild-mod UC tx

A

Recta 5-ASA>1g/day +/-
Oral 2-4.8g/day
If no response in 4-8 weeks add on oral or rectal corticosteroids

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10
Q

CD tx

A

Mild
Sulfasalazine 3-6g/day or PO Meselamine 2.4-4.8g/day or metronidazole up to 10-20mg/kg/day
Moderate
add on prednisone 40-60mg/day

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11
Q

Sulfasalazine S/E

A

nausea, headache, rash, hemolytic anemia,
hepatotoxicity
*most S/E are minor, dose related, and related to sulfapyridine not in 5-ASA preps
*may cross react w sulfonamide antibiotics

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12
Q

Sulfasalazine vs Mesalamine chem, efficacy, safety

A

mesalamine (2 linked 5-ASA moieties)

sulfasalazine (a sulfapyridine linked to a 5-ASA moiety with an azo bond)

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13
Q

Products that release in small bowel

A

Salofalk, Pentasa

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14
Q

Products that release in the colon

A

Sulfasalazine, olsalazine, Asacol and Mezavant

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15
Q

Mesalamine S/E

A

hypersensitivity (can rarely worsen sx), rarely renal toxicity

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16
Q

Long term corticosteroid tx in IBD

A

Not recommended for maintenance of remission due to long term s/e like osteoporosis (Ca+VitD recommended)

17
Q

NSAIDs in IDB

A

Avoid bc linked to worsening sx and disease flares

18
Q

Can 5-ASA be d/c abruptly?

A

Not recommended, may result in relapse