Inflammatory Bowel Disease Flashcards
What is IBD?
A spectrum of disease characterised by chronic relapsing inflammatory conditions of the bowel.
Made up of crohn’s and ulcerative colitis
What criteria do we use to classify IBD?
THe montreal classification uses:
- Age
- Location
- Extent of disease
- Severity
- Disease behaviour (strictures, penetration etc)
What is the source of IBD?
Its thought to be some sort of environmental trigger in the genetically susceptible.
Define Ulcerative Colitis?
Continuous colonic inflammation of variable distribution & severity.
How/when does UC present
Presentation peaks at 20-40yrs
= Bloody Diarrhoea
= Abdominal pain
= Weight Loss
Also causes pseudopolyps & Ulcers
Define a pseudopolyp
A “polyp” caused by destruction of the surrounding mucosa & submucosa rather than a proper polyp growing out from the gut wall
What genes are associated with IBD?
UC - HLA gene
Crohn’s - NOD2 gene
What do we call inflammation of the rectum?
Proctitis
How does UC affect the risk of CRC?
Long term UC (i.e. Over 10 yrs) can lead to CRC
What are the markers of a severe UC flare up?
A severe attack is defined by 6 or more bloody stools a day + 1 of the following:
- Fever
- Tachycardia
- Raised ESR or CRP
- Anaemia
- Low Albumin
- Leucocytosis or thrombocytosis
Define leuco- & thrombocytosis
Leucocytosis - Increase WCC
Thrombocytosis - Increase platelets
How/when does crohn’s disease present?
has two peaks:
- Age 20-40s
- Women >60
- Diarrhoea
- Abdominal Pain
- Weight loss & anorexia
- Malaise/lethargy/low fever
- Nausea & Vomiting
- Malabsorption leading to anaemia & vitamin deficiencies
Think logically. inflammation in the gut will make you absorp poorly so weight loos, anaemia, deficiencies.
Its an immune response so it will triger pain & general unwellness.
It will mess with passage of food causing nausea/vomiting and diarrhoea
What does crohn’s disease look like in the gut?
Histologically you can see non-caseating granulomas.
It turns the serosa a granular dark grey.
Also causes the mesentery to be thick, oedematous and fibrotic with fat wrapping it and the gut.
The wall of the gut becomes thickened and narrows hte lumen.
Its also distinctive because it affects multiple areas with healthy tissue gaps in between, this is called skip lesions
How can crohn’s be complicated?
With strictures, fistulas, abscesses and perforation.
It also incrases risk of cancer by 5x
How do we test for IBD?
With blood and stool tests:
Stool = Calprotectin level, its a biomarker of intestinal inflammation and so indicates IBD over IBS and can be used to monitor the degree of IBD and its healing.
Bloods:
High - ESR/CRP/platelet/WCC
Low - Albumin/Hb
pANCA
Colonoscopy or Capsule Enterography
CT/MRI & Barium swallow can also be sued