Dr. C.R. Panda talks in detail about — Inflammatory bowel disorders, also signifying the importance of early detection
Inflammatory bowel disease is a group of intestinal disorders that cause prolonged inflammation of the digestive tract. It includes Ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease.
Symptoms of IBD vary depending on the location and severity of inflammation, but they may include diarrhea, bleeding ulcers, stomach pain, cramping, and bloating due to bowel obstruction, weight loss and anemia, which can cause delayed physical growth or development in children.
The immune system may also play a role in IBD. The immune system normally defends the body from pathogens, which are organisms that cause diseases and infections. A bacterial or viral infection of the digestive tract can trigger an immune response. The digestive tract becomes inflamed as the body tries to create an immune response against the invaders. In a healthy immune response, the inflammation goes away when the infection is gone.
In people with IBD, however, digestive tract inflammation can occur even when there’s no infection. The immune system attacks the body’s own cells instead. This is known as an autoimmune response. IBD can also occur when the inflammation doesn’t go away after the infection is cured. The inflammation may continue for months or even years.
Smoking is one of the main risk factors for developing Crohn’s disease. Smoking also aggravates the pain and other symptoms associated with Crohn’s disease. It increases the risk for complications too.
Possible complications of IBD include malnutrition, colorectal cancer, fistulas, or tunnels that go through the bowel wall, creating a hole between different parts of the digestive tract, intestinal rupture, which is also known as perforation, bowel obstruction.