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Colitis


Colitis is a digestive disease characterized by inflammation of the colon. There are several types of colitis, including ulcerative colitis, Crohn's Disease, ischemic colitis, infectious colitis, and atypical colitis. more...

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Signs and symptoms

Signs and symptoms of colitis include pain, tenderness in the abdomen, fever, swelling of the colon tissue, bleeding, erythema (redness) of the surface of the colon, bleeding, and ulcerations of the colon. Tests that show these signs are plain X-rays of the colon, testing the stool for blood and pus, and colonoscopy. Additional tests include stool cultures and blood tests such as a complete blood count, C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and a blood chemistry tests.

Types

A well known subtype of colitis is pseudomembranous colitis, resulting from infection by a toxigenic strain of Clostridium difficile. Other parasitic infections can also cause colitis.

Any colitis which has a rapid downhill clinical course is known as fulminant colitis, which is characterized by severe bloody diarrhea, fever, hypovolemia, and anemia. This type is seen in 5-15% ulcerative colitis patients.

Irritable bowel syndrome is separate disease which has been called spastic colitis. This name causes confusion since colitis is not a feature of irritable bowel syndrome.

Autistic enterocolitis is a disputed medical entity but refers to a type of colitis found in patients with autism.

Treatment

Treatment of colitis may include the administration of antibiotics and general anti-inflammatory medications such as Mesalamine or it's derivatives; steroids, or one of a number of other drugs that downregulate inflammation. Surgery is sometimes needed, especially in cases of fulminant colitis.

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Medical breakthroughs: options for migraine treatment, news about colitis flare-ups, and flowers for cholesterol
From Natural Health, 2/1/05 by Rachel Dowd

Sleep away migraines.

A natural sleep supplement is one of three newly confirmed weapons against migraines. Brazilian researchers gave 32 migraine sufferers 3 milligrams of melatonin daily before bedtime. After three months, 78 percent of the subjects saw migraine occurrence drop by at least half. The melatonin quelled headache intensity and shortened pain duration by 50 percent.

Meanwhile, the FDA approved two other options for migraine treatment: a custom-fitted mouth guard called the NTI Tension Suppression System, which targets nocturnal jaw clenching, and the epilepsy drug Topamax, which significantly reduced migraines in clinical trials.

Eat, drink, be wary

Red meat and alcohol may triple the chances ulcerative colitis will flare up. Apparently, the sulfur found in meat and alcohol produces hydrogen sulphide, which can damage the inner lining of the bowel. A study in the journal Gut concluded that patients eating 3.5 or more ounces of meat daily were three times as likely to relapse as those who are less than 2 ounces. Drinking two units of alcohol a day (10 ounces of wine or 24 ounces of beer) nearly tripled relapse risk compared to drinking less than one.

Hibiscus Has red wine met its match?

HIBISCUS FLOWERS contain flavonoids and polyphenols that control cholesterol and protect against heart disease, concludes a study in the Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture. Taiwanese researchers tested hibiscus extract on rats fed a normal, high-fructose, or high-cholesterol diet. After 12 weeks, hibiscus reduced levels of LDL cholesterol and the LDL-HDL ratio in the high-sugar and high-cholesterol groups. In Taiwan, liquid hibiscus extract is added to soft drinks and is taken as an herbal treatment for hypertension.

COPYRIGHT 2005 Weider Publications
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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