IBDs Flashcards
What is Ulcerative Colitis?
chronic, relapsing-remitting inflammatory disease affecting the large bowel and rectum
UC Risk Factors
- FMHx
- Genetic predisposition: HLA-B27
- No appendicectomy
- Not smoking
- NSAIDs
UC histological findings
Surface inflammation with loss of goblet cells and crypt abscess (diffuse mucosal atropy, basal plasmacytosis and mucin depletion)
UC complications
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis
- Toxic megacolon
remission, acute flare and 3rd
UC Mx for stable patients
1st line: Topical ASA, if not tolerated then Oral ASA e.g. mesalazine to induce remission 4/52
2nd line: Corticosteroids e.g Oral Prednisolone for acute flare weaning off 6-8/52
3rd line: Thiopurines e.g. Azathioprine to maintain remission if 1st+2nd failed OR 2> flare ups in 12/12
UC Mx for acute severe flare
1st line: IV steroid
2nd line: Immuno suppressant: Ciclosporin
When to perform Emergency panproctocolectomy
Acute severe flare not responding to IV corticosteroids for 72h
2
Skin manifestation in UC/Crohn’s?
Erythema nodosum
Pyoderma gangrenosum
often at shins
Ocular manifestation for UC/Crohn’s
Ant. Uveitis
Episcleritis
UC Sx
- Bloody + mucus diarrhoea
- Abdo pain
- tenesmus
Crohn’s Sx
- Non-blood diarrhoea
- Abdo pain
- WL
- mouth ulcers
- tenesmus
Crohn’s endoscpy features:
- Patchy, skip lesions
- Transmural
- Cobblestone appearance, deep ulcers
UC endoscopy features
- Continuos lesions
- Limited to the mucosa layer
Crohn’s Mx
STOP SMOKING
1st Induce remission: Oral steroids OR IV hydrocortisone
2nd Maintain remission: Thiopurines (2 or more flare in 12/12)