Crohn's disease
From WikiLectures
- Crohn's disease (colitis regionalis, terminal ileitis) is a chronic inflammatory íntestinal disease
- inflammation occurs in any part of the digestive tract and has a segmental character
- there are sections of healthy mucosa between the affected areas.
- the most commonly affected area is the terminal ileum
- inflammation affects the entire wall thickness of the organ and is characterized by the presence of non-caseifying epithelioid granulomas.
Epidemiology
- Crohn's disease is more common in younger people
- the highest prevalence is in the group of 30-39 years. 10% of patients are diagnosed before the age of 17.
- the average prevalence in adults is about 130 / 100,000, the incidence is 5.6 / 100,000 inhabitants; •
- the incidence in children is on the rise, reaching up to 9-10 / 100,000, especially in northern Europe •
- the incidence in children in the Czech Republic is 6.2 / 100,000.
Risk factors
- Grade 1 relatives have a 10-35-fold higher risk of disease.
- Genetic mutations.
- High hygienic standards in childhood, smoking, early appendectomy, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
Etiopathogenesis
- The cause of the disease is not yet known
- This is probably a dysregulation of the immune response to common bacterial antigens
- During the autoimmune reaction, transmural inflammation occurs, that affects the entire wall of the intestine, which often passes to the mesentery.
- Epithelioid granulomas, ulcerations, and fissures form in the intestinal wall.
- We often see intramural and intraperitoneal abscesses or fistulas (especially in the anal area).
- Due to long-term inflammation, the bowel may narrow by scarring of the tissue (scar stricture).
- Crohn's disease is characterized by segmental GIT involvement → alternating inflammatory and unaffected sections ("skip lesions").
- Predilection areas include the terminal ileum and ascending colon, but any part of the GIT can be affected.
Pathological picture
- The entire intestinal wall is affected and the inflammation is segmental or plurisegmental.
- Typically, the affected sections alternate with the unaffected sections (unlike ulcerative colitis).
Macroscopic image
- Macroscopically, we see thickening of the intestinal wall and mesentery. Regional lymph nodes are often enlarged.
- The mucosa is hypertrophic and edematous.
- The image is often compared to cobblestones - elongated aphthous ulcers above the lymphatic follicles surrounding the unaffected mucosa, swollen fistula mouths, pseudopolyps.
- Affected serosis leads to adhesions in which fistulas form. In the further course of the disease, fiber production follows, which leads to stenoses.
Microscopic image
- In the microscope we see mucosal edema with polymorphonuclear infiltration, followed by fiber production with the formation of tuberculoid granulomas (epithelioid cells and giant Langhans-type cells, unlike TB, do not caseify) in the submucosa, subserous, and regional nodes.
Clinical picture
- Like all autoimmune diseases, Crohn's disease manifests itself in multiple systems.
- The typical manifestation is in the digestive tract, but the eyes, skin and mucous membranes, liver, pancreas, kidneys are also affected, and blood homeostasis is often disturbed.
Intestinal manifestations
- Common symptoms include abdominal pain and chronic diarrhea (rarely with blood).
- Fissures, perianal abscesses, fistulas, and mariske (anal lashes - skin growths in the area of the anus and skin transition) may occur around the rectum.
Extraintestinal manifestation
- Extraintestinal symptoms occur in more than 40% of patients.
- It often precedes intestinal manifestations by up to several years.
- These are mostly non-specific symptoms such as recurrent fevers, anorexia, weight loss, and growth retardation, especially in children.
- The main systems that tend to be affected include:
- skeleton: growth failure and osteoporosis (proinflammatory cytokines suppress growth, suppress IGF-1 production, stimulate bone resorption; insufficient energy intake, malabsorption, loss of protein and trace elements in the stool, chronic treatment with corticosteroids)
- skin and mucous membranes: aphthous stomatitis, gingivitis, granulomatosis cheilitis, erythema nodosum on the lower legs, and purulent pyoderma
- eyes: iritis, uveitis, episcleritis; rare in children; corticoid therapy can cause cataracts and glaucoma
- liver and pancreas: primary sclerosing cholangitis, cholecystolithiasis; pancreatitis after azathioprine or mesalazine therapy
- vascular system: hypercoagulable state (thrombocytosis, increased fibrin, factor V and VII, decreased antithrombin), which may cause deep vein thrombosis, pulmonary embolism or CMP
- kidneys and urinary tract: fistulas, urinary stones.
Complication
- Inflammation often spreads to the surrounding area and forms fistulas (ie, canals connecting the sites of inflammation to any other site).
- Fistulas can be:
- internal: enteroenteric, enterocolic, enterovesical, rectovaginal
- external (perineal abdominal wall)
- Other complications include
- formation of abscesses, which may be intercostal, pelvic, retroperitoneal, hepatic
- intestinal stenosis, which is dangerous due to the impending ileus
- perianal fissures
- intestinal perforation and its complications: peritonitis
- massive bleeding
- toxic megacolon
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