Inflammatory bowel disease
Content
·
Inflammatory
bowel disease
·
Etiology
·
Pathophysiology
OBJECTIVES
By the end of this session the students will be
able to
• Define inflammatory bowel disease
• Explain the etiology of inflammatory bowel disease
• Describe the pathophysiology of inflammatory bowel
disease
Inflammatory bowel disease
Inflammatory bowel disease describes two major chronic
nonspecific inflammatory disorders of the gastro intestinal tract
• They
are:
• Crohn’s
disease(CD)
• Ulcerative
colitis(UC)
• Main
difference between Crohn's disease and UC is the location and nature of the
inflammatory changes
• Crohn's can affect any part of the
gastrointestinal tract, from mouth to anus , although a majority of the cases
start in the terminal ileum
• Ulcerative colitis, in contrast, is restricted
to the colon and the rectum
Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's
Etiology of Inflammatory bowel disease
Epidemology of Inflammatory bowel disease
Ulcerative colitis |
Crohn’s disease |
|
Incidence (US) |
11/100 000 |
7/100 000 |
Age of onset |
15-30 &
60-80 |
15-30 &
60-80 |
Male:female ratio |
1:1 |
1,1-1,8:1 |
Smoking |
May prevent
disease |
May cause
disease |
Oral contraceptive |
No increased
risk |
Relative risk
1,9 |
Appendectomy |
Not protective |
Protective |
Monozygotic twins |
8% concordance |
67% concordance |
INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE
• Inflammatory
response with IBD may indicate abnormal regulation of the normal immune
response or an autoimmune reaction to self-antigens - microflora of the
gastrointestinal tract may provide an environmental trigger to activate
inflammation
• Crohn’s
disease has been described as “a disorder mediated by T lymphocytes which
arises in genetically susceptible individuals as a result of a breakdown in the
regulatory constraints on mucosal immune responses to enteric bacteria”
INFECTIOUS FACTORS
• Microorganisms
are a likely factor in the initiation of inflammation in IBD -
Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases have increased numbers of
surface-adherent and intracellular bacteria
• Suspect
infectious agents include the measles virus, protozoans, mycobacteria, and
other bacteria
• Bacteria
elaborate peptides (e.g., formyl-methionylleucyl-phenylalanine) that have
chemotactic properties - influx of inflammatory cells with subsequent release
of inflammatory mediators and tissue destruction
GENETIC FACTORS
• Genetic
factors predispose patients to inflammatory bowel diseases, particularly
Crohn’s disease - studies of monozygotic twins, there has been a high
concordance rate, with both individuals of the pair having an IBD (particularly
Crohn’s disease) - first-degree relatives
of patients with IBD had a 13-fold increase in the risk of disease
• Other
investigators - genetic markers -
more frequent in those with IBD
(particularly major histocompatability complex, HLA-DR2 for ulcerative colitis
and HLA-A2 for Crohn’s disease)
IMMUNOLOGICAL MECHANISMS
• Inflammatory
process is a component of wound healing, the inflamed mucosa activates the
typical inflammation –associated genes and genes associated with wound healing
• Pro-inflammatory
antigenic triggers in the intestinal lumen activate macrophages and t-helper
lymphocytes to release inflammatory mediators
Pathophysiology of Inflammatory bowel disease
Ulcerative colitis:
• UC
is confined to be in rectum and colon and affects the mucosa and the sub mucosa
- some instances, a short segment of terminal ileum may be inflamed
• Primary
lesion of uc occurs in the crypts of the mucosa (crypts of liberkhun) in the
form of crypt abscess
• Necrosis
of the epithelium occurs and visible only in microscope
• Other
typical ulceration patterns include a “collar button ulcer”, which results from
extensive sub mucosal undermining at the ulcer edge which results in diarrhea
and bleeding
• UC
complications can be local (colon/rectum) or systemic
• Complications
could be minor, serious or life threatening
• Minor
complication occurs in the majority of ulcerative colitis patients. They
include: hemorrhoids, anal fissures or perirectal abscesses
• Major
complication is toxic megacolon (1-3%), massive colonic hemorrage
• Risk
of colon cancer begins to increase after 10-15 years of uc diagnosis
Ulcerative colitis – microscopic features
• Process is limited to the mucosa and submucosa with deeper layer unaffected
• Two major histologic features:
- the crypt architecture of the colon is distorted
- some patients have basal plasma cells and multiple basal lymphoid aggregates
• 40-50% of patients have disease limited to
the rectum and rectosigmoid
• 30-40% of patients have disease extending
beyond the sigmoid
• 20% of patients have a total colitis
• Proximal spread occurs in continuity
without areas of uninvolved mucosa
Symptoms of Ulcerative colitis
Crohn’s disease:
• Target
point for CD- terminal ileum
• About
two-thirds of patients have some colonic involvement, and 15% to 25% of
patients have only colonic disease
• Bowel
wall injury is extensive and the intestinal lumen is often narrowed
• Mesentery
first becomes thickened and edematous and then fibrotic
• Ulcers
tend to be deep and elongated and extend along the longitudinal axis of the
bowel, atleast into the submucosa
• “Cobblestone”
appearance of the bowel wall results from deep mucosal ulceration intermingled
with nodular submucosal thickening
• Fistula
formation is common and occurs much more frequently than with ulcerative
colitis
• Fistulae
often occur in the areas of worst inflammation, where loops of bowel have become
matted together by fibrous adhesions
• Nutritional deficiencies are common
with Crohn’s disease
• Weight loss, growth failure in
children, iron deficiency anemia, vitamin B12 deficiency, folate deficiency,
hypoalbuminemia, hypokalemia, and osteomalacia
Sign & Symptoms of Crohn’s disease
Dignosis of Crohn’s disease
• The
first clue in the diagnosis of IBD are the symptoms:
• Unrelenting
diarrhea
• Blood
or mucus in the stool (more common with ulcerative colitis than Crohn’s
disease)
• Fever
• Abdominal
pain
TESTS :
• Complete blood cell (CBC) count,
• Electrolyte
panel, and
• Liver function tests (LFT)
• Fecal
occult blood test (also called stool gaiac or hemoccult test)
OTHER TESTS
ü X-RAY
ü BARIUM
ENEMA
ü COLONOSCOPY
ü ENDOSCOPY
ü SIGMOIDOSCOPY
Comparision of Ulcerative colitis & Crohn’s disease
Features |
Ulcerative colitis |
Crohn’s |
Abdominal pain |
Variable |
Common |
Depth of inflammation |
Mucosal |
Transmural |
Diarrhea |
Severe |
Less severe |
Fistula and sinus tracts |
Rare |
Common |
Distribution |
Diffuse, contiguous spread; always involves rectum; spares
proximal gastrointestinal tract |
Segmental, noncontiguous spread (“skip lesions”); less
common rectal involvement; occurs in entire GIT |
Clinical Features of Ulcerative colitis & Crohn’s disease
UC |
Crohn’s disease |
|
Blood in stool |
Yes |
Occasionally |
Mucus |
Yes |
Occasionally |
Systemic
symptoms |
Occasionally |
Frequently |
Pain |
Occasionally |
Frequently |
Abdominal mass |
Rarely |
Yes |
Perineal
disease |
No |
Frequently |
SUMMARY
• Inflammatory
bowel disease describes two major chronic nonspecific inflammatory disorders of
the gastro intestinal tract ulcerative colitis and crohns disease
• Major
causes of inflammatory bowel disease are infectious agents, environmental
factors, genetics, diet
• UC is confined to be in rectum and colon and
affects the mucosa and the sub mucosa by release of inflammatory cells
• Ulcers in crohn’s tend to be deep and elongated and extend along the longitudinal axis of the bowel, into the submucosa
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