Ulcerative Colitis Flashcards
Define ulcerative colitis
a type of inflammatory bowel disease that characteristically involves the rectum and extends proximally to affect a variable length of the colon. It is recognised as a multifactorial polygenic disease, as the exact aetiology is still unknown
- Affects the mucosal layer
- Affects the rectum extending proximally
- Continuous inflammation
- Red, inflamed, friable mucosa
- Crypt ulcers
- Pseudopolyps
What are the causes/risk factors of ulcerative colitis?
Unknown aetiology but there seems to be interplay between genetic and environmental
factors
Genetic factors • Family history (greater genetic association in CD than UC) • CARD15 (NOD2) • HLA-B27 • Increased serum p-ANCA
Environmental factors • Smoking (increases risk of CD but reduces risk of UC) • NSAIDs • High sugar and fat intake • Chronic stress and depression • Intestinal dysbiosis
What are the symptoms of ulcerative colitis?
• Abdominal pain/cramps • Diarrhoea • Fever • Fatigue/malaise • Weight loss • Bloody diarrhoea (with mucus) • Tenesmus • Urgency
What are the signs ulcerative colitis?
- Weight loss
- Clubbing
- Abdominal tenderness
- Signs of anaemia
- Uveitis
What are the investigations for ulcerative colitis?
Bloods • FBC - Low Hb - High WCC - High platelet count • Raised ESR/CRP • Low albumin • Deranged LFTs (associated liver disease)
Stool • MC&S – exclude infectious colitis • Faecal calprotectin – indicates migration of neutrophils to intestinal mucosa i.e. inflammation; distinguishes IBD from IBS and assesses disease severity AXR – dilated bowel loops indicates ileus, exclude toxic megacolon
Flexible sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy with
biopsy
• Determines severity
• Detect dysplasia
Serology
• Positive p-ANCA
Barium enema
• Mucosal ulceration
• Featureless colon
• Thumbprinting
What is the management for ulcerative colitis?
Conservative
• Education and advice
Medical
• 5-ASA analogues e.g. mesalazine, sulfasalazine
• Steroids e.g. prednisolone, budesonide
• Immunosuppressants e.g. azathioprine, cyclosporin, mercaptopurine, methotrexate
• TNF-alpha inhibitors e.g. infliximab, adalimumab
Indications for surgery
• Failure of medical therapy
• Complications
• Failure to thrive in children
Acute exacerbations • IV fluids • IV corticosteroids • Ciclosporin if no improvement within 72h • Antibiotics • Surgery
Conservative
• Regular colonoscopic surveillance
Inducing remission • Mild o Oral +/- topical 5-ASA • Moderate o High dose oral 5-ASA o +/- topical 5-ASA or oral beclomethasone • If no improvement after 4 weeks add prednisolone or tacrolimus • Infliximab if severe
Maintaining remission
• Oral +/- topical 5-ASA
• Azathioprine, mercaptopurine
Surgical
• Proctocolectomy with ileostomy
• Colectomy with ileo-anal pouch
What are the complications of ulcerative colitis?
- Haemorrhage
- Perforation
- Toxic megacolon
- Colonic carcinoma
- Gallstones
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis