- A form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that can affect any part of the GIT (mouth to anus), especially the terminal ileum
Epidemiology
- Most common in UK and Scandinavian countries
- More common in Jewish people
- Bimodal age distribution – 15-30 and 50-80 years old
Etiology
- Etiology is largely unknown but there are familial, infectious and environmental theories
- Infective – dysregulated response to M. tuberculosis
- Genetic – associated with the NOD2/CARD15 gene on chromosome 16
- Immunologic
- Abnormal host response to dietary antigens
- Defective mucosal barrier – increases exposure to antigens
- Environmental – smoking
Pathology
- Can affect any part of GIT
- Multiple areas may be involved with intervening areas of normal bowel – skip lesions
- Mesentery is thickened
- Mesenteric fat creeps along the sides of the bowel wall toward the anti-mesenteric border – fat wrapping
- Involves all layers of the bowel wall – transmural
- Whereas ulcerative colitis involves only the mucosa and submucosa
- Ulcerations range from short, shallow, aphthous ulcers to deep fissuring ulcers
- Fissuring of mucosa and the submucosal edema give the bowel cobblestone appearance with formation of pseudopolyps
- If ulcers fully penetrate it can lead to fistula formation
- Bowel wall can thicken with fibrosis, causing stricture formation
- Peri-anal Crohn’s disease can lead to peri-anal fistulas and abscesses
Histology
- Lymphocytic infiltration in all layers of bowel
- Non-caseating granulomas
Clinical features
- Classic triad – abdominal pain, diarrhoea, weight loss
- Usually a slow, insidious presentation
- Others – anorexia, fever, recurring oral aphthous ulcers
- Peri-anal disease – fissure, fistula, abscess
- Extra-intestinal manifestations
- Skin – erythema nodosum, pyoderma gangrenosum
- Eyes – iritis, uveitis
- Joints – arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis
- Blood – anaemia, thrombocytosis, DVT
- Sclerosing cholangitis
- Nephrotic syndrome
- Pancreatitis
- Amyloidosis
Investigations
- Serology – ASCA (+) and pANCA (-) is highly suggestive of Crohn’s disease
- Inverse pattern is highly suggestive of ulcerative colitis – ASCA (-) and pANCA (+)
- Barium small bowel follow through – strictures
- Colonoscopy – shows cobblestone appearance
- Biopsy – to distinguish from ulcerative colitis
- CT, MRI
Treatment
Lifestyle changes
- Smoking cessation
- High fibre diet
- A food diary – to help identify foods that may trigger flare ups
Medical
- Corticosteroids – budesonide, methylprednisolone, prednisone
- To induce remission in the initial phase of the disease
- Antibiotics – metronidazole
- Aminosalicylates – sulfasalazine, mesalamine
- For maintenance
- However they are more effect in ulcerative colitis
- Azathioprine – for maintenance
- Methotrexate
- Monoclonal antibody – infliximab (anti-TNF)
Surgery
- Surgery is not a definitive cure as the disease eventually recurs
- Indications for surgery
- Intractability
- Intestinal obstruction
- Fistulas
- Toxic megacolon
- Massive bleeding
- Surgeries
- Stricuroplasty
- Ileocecal resection followed by anastomosis between the ileum and ascending colon
- Surgery for peri-anal diseases – i.e. for fissures, abscess and fistula
- Segmental colon resection – when inflammation is limited to a specific segment of colon
- Total proctocolectomy – removal of colon, rectum and anus
- Total abdominal colectomy – removal of colon, but sparing the rectum and anus