Showing posts with label ulcerative colitis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ulcerative colitis. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Beat Inflammatory Bowel Disease

A Cleveland Clinic study found that fish oil, soluble fiber and antioxidants helped treat patients with ulcerative colitis and reduced their need for steroid therapy. Patients who took the supplements, which have fewer side effects and are safer than many of the colitis drugs on the market, were less likely to start treatment with the drugs.

The study involved patients aged 18 and older who suffered from mild to moderate active ulcerative colitis. Those who were on corticosteroid therapy and were given the nutritional supplement needed significantly lower doses of the drugs to control their symptoms than those given a placebo.

Ulcerative colitis, an inflammatory bowel disease that typically affects those between the ages of 15 and 40, can cause abdominal cramps, bloody diarrhea and fever. Drugs like corticosteroids are used to control inflammation in the disease, but, while they're highly effective, long-term use often leads to:

  • Insomnia
  • Mood alterations
  • Increased appetite
  • Hypertension
  • Osteoporosis
  • Other negative side-effects

The side effects are often so severe that many patients stop using the drugs all together. However, over 25 percent of patients who stop their use have a relapse of symptoms.

While the nutritional supplement in the current study combined fish oil, soluble fiber and antioxidants, previous studies have shown that fish oil alone is also able to reduce the need for corticosteroids in colitis patients.

Researchers believe that a nutritional supplement like SEROVERA® AMP 500 may help to diminish inflammation and provide nutrition in colitis patients, and suggest physicians add this combination of ingredients to their ulcerative colitis therapy regimens.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Foods and Supplements That Can Worsen Diarrhea

If you suffer from Colitis, Ulcerative Colitis, Crohn’s and have chronic diarrhea the followings foods and supplements may contribute to loose stools.

  • Dried beans, corn, vegetables and cabbage family vegetables are all high in fiber, which may worsen diarrhea
  • Fruits and juices contain fructose, which can worsen diarrhea
  • Caffeine-containing beverages such as coffee and tea can have a laxative effect
  • Alcoholic beverages such as beer, wine and liquor can worsen diarrhea
  • Fatty meats such as bacon, lunch meats, and heavily marbled meats can worsen diarrhea
  • Fried foods, pastries and chips are high in fat which can worsen diarrhea
  • NutraSweet may be a problem for some people
  • Large quantities of nuts or nut butters may worsen symptoms
  • Concentrated sweets can worsen symptoms
  • Dried fruits such as figs, dates, raisins and prunes can have a laxative effect
  • Prune juice can exert a laxative effect
  • Sugar-free gums and mints contain the sugar alcohols sorbitol, mannitol, and/or xylitol, which can have a laxative effect
  • Real black licorice (not the candy) can have a laxative effect

In addition to food choices that may be bother some there are several supplement which may cause more frequent bowel movements and exacerbate existing diarrhea.

Supplements that can Worsen Symptoms

  • 5-HTP
  • Acetyl L-carnitine
  • Activated charcoal
  • Bee pollen
  • Borage oil
  • Bovine colostrum
  • Cayenne
  • Chlorophyll
  • Chondroitin sulfate
  • DHA
  • EPA
  • Flaxseed oil
  • Glucosamine
  • Guarana
  • Guar gum
  • Horse Chestnut seed
  • Kola Nut
  • Lactulose
  • Mate
  • Senna
Stay ahead of your diarrhea by staying well hydrated and well informed.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Hypnotherapy/Psychotherapy & Crohn's Disease

All physical diseases including cancer, heart disease, ulcerative colitis, IBS and even skin complaints have been helped with Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy. The power of suggestion and mental imagery is a tool all too often overlooked but which can be of immense help to Crohn's disease sufferers. Remember also that Crohn's disease is a stress related disease and Hypnotherapy and Psychotherapy are both excellent aids to help control emotional stress.

A controlled study in Europe involving 266 patients suffering from Crohns disease revealed that psychotherapy is an important element in the treatment of this disease. The researchers found that psychotherapy can improve the therapeutic possibilities of drugs, diet and surgery. Psychotherapy combined with relaxation and removal of stress were considered along with the personality of the patient before the outbreak of the disease. It was suggested that unknown emotional conflicts such as depression, mental lability and anorexia may influence the course of the disease (1).

(1) Psychotherapy of Crohn disease Zur Psychotherapie des M. Crohn. Feiereis H Langenbecks Arch Chir 1984, 364 p407-11

Monday, May 19, 2008

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory Bowel Disease
by Ronald Hoffman, M.D., CNS

Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease are two conditions that have many features in common and are sometimes referred to as "inflammatory bowel disease" (IBD). While not as common as less severe conditions like "irritable bowel syndrome," Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis now afflict hundreds of thousands of Americans. They appear to be increasing in frequency. Crohn's disease was once a very rare disorder but it is gradually becoming more common. There are about twice as many cases of it today as there were 30 years ago. Moreover, these conditions are increasingly afflicting children and teenagers.

Symptoms include periodic attacks of cramps, abdominal pain and diarrhea and a general sense of feeling ill. There may be fever, loss of appetite, and weight loss. Especially in ulcerative colitis there may be rectal bleeding, diarrhea, and mucous in the stool. These symptoms sometimes begin insidiously, gradually worsening, or sometimes they begin all at once with great severity.

These conditions must be diagnosed by a physician, usually a specialist in gastroenterology. The rectum and large intestine may be examined by sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy. A biopsy specimen from the intestinal wall will probably be taken during one of these tests. Or an air-contrast barium enema or upper GI swallow with follow-through lower gastrointestinal x-rays may be given. A proper evaluation for inflammatory bowel disease will usually include stool tests to rule out parasite infection which can easily mimic ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease, and blood tests to test the severity of the inflammation and blood loss.

Why should inflammatory bowel diseases be on the upswing? There are many theories but conventional medicine has not yet satisfactorily answered the question. Many gastroenterologists choose not to believe it, but dietary factors clearly play a role. For example, Swedish researchers have found that people who eat at fast food restaurants regularly and who eat too much sugar may increase their risk of Crohn's disease. Researchers from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm interviewed 152 people with Crohn's disease, 145 with ulcerative colitis and 305 healthy people about their eating habits in the five previous years. Those who ate fast food at least two times a week were 3.4 times more likely to develop Crohn's disease and 3.9 times more likely to develop ulcerative colitis, according to a recent issue of the Journal of Epidemiology. Fast foods in the Swedish study consisted of hamburger or hot dogs with mustard and catchup plus fresh fries or cream potatoes and soft drinks. It was also noted that those who ate more than 55 grams of sugar per day were 2.6 times more likely to develop Crohn's disease. Not surprisingly, an American expert in gastroenterology attempted to refute this study. He contended that IBD sufferers probably started eating the high sugar/high calorie foods in an effort to gain weight and chose foods low in fiber to reduce their diarrhea.

Another interesting theory is that the increase in IBD that has taken place in the last 50 years parallels the increasing use of antibiotics in human and veterinary medicine. Antibiotics can promote the proliferation of toxic bacteria and can make them more invasive. The epidemic-like spread of Crohn's disease over roughly the last 50 years started with the introduction of antibiotics and developed in parallel with an increase in antibiotic consumption. A pair of German scientists hypothesized that Crohn's disease is an infectious disease caused by a mutated form of normal bacterial flora which became a super germ under constant selection pressure from antibiotics. They note that treatment with antibiotics for other diseases can encourage the development of Crohn's disease in susceptible individuals. An interesting correlation has been found between measles exposure early in life and the likelihood of Crohn's disease. In a British study, the frequency of Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis and other stomach problems was evaluated in 3,545 who had received live measles vaccines. The relative risk of developing Crohn's disease in the vaccinated group was threefold and the development of ulcerative colitis was two-and-a-half fold. This study suggests an association between measles vaccination and inflammatory bowel disease.

In addition to dietary changes which people in the West have undergone in the past half century, new unnatural products have been introduced into our gastrointestinal tracts. These include fluoridated and chlorinated water, the residue of dental fillings containing mercury, many common antacids containing aluminum, and other potentially hazardous materials. A lively debate has taken place in recent years in medical journals over the potential role of toothpaste in contributing to inflammatory bowel disease. Researchers state that they have found pigments in the intestinal mucosa containing aluminum, silicon, and titanium through electron microscopy and x-ray analytical techniques. In other studies, they have found not only toothpaste residues but traces of other materials used in dental work. They have suggested that further research be done on the role of toothpaste, food additives, and synthetic food ingredients as possible causative agents in inflammatory bowel disease.

Clearly, infant feeding patterns may be related to the incidence of inflammatory bowel disease. Some studies have shown a correlation between lack of breast feeding and susceptibility to IBD. Also, the premature introduction of allergenic food such as cow's milk, soy, and difficult-to-digest fruit juices may accelerate development of IBD in children.

Drugs are the usual therapy for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. These include anti-inflammatory agents like Azulfidine as well as steroids and immunosuppressants agents borrowed from the cancer arena. All these medications have side effects and are often ineffective. With ulcerative colitis, the ultimate "solution" is removal of the large intestine, with ileostomy (external bag). For Crohn's disease, however, surgery produces less conclusive results. Sometimes patients with Crohn's disease are subjected to multiple surgeries with progressive shortening of their intestines until they are subject to the debilitating end-game of short-gut syndrome.

The official "party line" of gastroenterologists is that diet doesn't matter in IBD. Sometimes instructions are given to follow a "bland" diet and to avoid spicy, abrasive, or laxative foods. A recent medical therapy text begrudgingly admits that "in the presence of the loss of appetite and diminished food intake, a once daily multivitamin supplement does not seem unreasonable." Some patients are even placed on intravenous or tube feedings to "rest" their digestive tracts. Nevertheless I am firmly convinced that nutritional therapy is of utmost importance in the management of IBD and has provided me with enormously satisfying patient outcomes. One of my favorite jumping off points is Breaking the Vicious Cycle, a book by Elaine Gottschall. This book has sold over 90,000 copies in North America, most of them in Canada, Ms. Gottschall's country of origin. As I state in my introduction to Breaking the Vicious Cycle, "by introducing the approach of the Specific Carbohydrate Diet it enables patients to thrive on a varied diet that very often reduces symptoms and allows healing of an inflamed intestinal tract. The diet acknowledges the often-recognized link between Crohn's disease and gluten intolerance by prohibiting gluten-containing foods but goes further by restricting other problematic carbohydrates, yet it contains enough carbohydrate content to prevent weight loss and debilitation in nutritionally-compromised patients. While challenging to implement, it virtually always provides patients with some measure of relief and sometimes ultimately with remission.

The Specific Carbohydrate Diet is excellent for management of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, but sometimes requires additional customization. For example, while peanuts are allowed on the Gottschall Diet, I recently discovered a patient who did not experience improvement in her symptoms until she eliminated peanuts after an allergy test revealed her unique susceptibility to this species of legumes. Therefore, food allergy testing helps to fine tune the specific dietary recommendations. In one recent dietary trial from South Africa, foods triggering bowel symptoms in patients with IBD included citrus, pineapple, banana, cheese, tomato, coffee, and milk. Many patients are lactose intolerant. In another study, seven of eleven patients showed skin test reactivity to milk, wheat, and soy protein.

While the usual work up for Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis attempts to rule out the presence of harmful parasites, oftentimes repeat stool tests disclose their hidden presence. Even when parasites cannot be found, harmful bacteria or yeast are sometimes the culprits. The Specific Carbohydrate Diet can beneficially alter intestinal flora, but sometimes targeted therapy is necessary for eradicating yeast or harmful bacteria. Antibiotics are sometimes used by gastroenterologists but I prefer to use natural botanicals like citrus seed extract, artemesia, olive extract, gentian, uva ursi, or aloe mucilaginous polysaccharides. Antifungal medications like Diflucan, Sporonox, Lamisil and Nystatin appear to cause less intestinal disruption than prescription antibiotics, and are sometimes necessary for restoration of balance. The active ingredient of Pepto Bismol is useful in certain patients as well.

Of greatest interest is Omega-3 fish oil, recently demonstrated to be helpful in both ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. Italian researchers have recently demonstrated that a year's use of nine fish oil capsules resulted in a doubling of the remission rate of patients with Crohn's disease. The capsules are enterically-coated and not yet commonly available in health food stores. The use of essential fatty acids in the treatment of these inflammatory conditions is supported by favorable results in trials with other inflammatory conditions like rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis.

Specific benefit can be obtained from oral dosing with the amino acid L-glutamine. One study showed that seriously ill patients requiring intravenous feeding were more likely to wean themselves from dependency on nutritional supplementation by vein when given relatively high oral doses of L-glutamine on the order of one tablespoon three times daily, equivalent to 50 grams. L-glutamine may work as a direct "food" for intestinal cells in need of repair, as well as by virtue of the fact that it is a precursor for synthesis of the premier antioxidant glutathione.

Indeed, antioxidants appeared to play a special role in protection of the intestinal cells from inflammation. It is believed that highly reactive free radicals literally disrupt cell membranes and cause inflammation in the gut. Several studies point to critical depletion of vitamin C, selenium, zinc, and vitamin E in patients with inflammatory bowel disease. Vitamin C and zinc must be supplemented carefully, particularly because of their potential to cause gastrointestinal upset.

Additional vitamins that appear to play a role in repair include folic acid, which may be depleted due to the use of azulfidine or related medication. A significant percentage of patients with IBD may be B12 deficient, especially those who have undergone surgery which removes a critical part of the intestine that absorbs B12. Because of chronic diarrhea fat-soluble vitamins like A and D may be depleted as well. Studies show that the bioflavonoid quercetin can act as a natural anti-inflammatory reducing the tendency towards "leaky gut syndrome."

Of course, probiotics such as acidophilus and bifidobacteria play a role in the management of inflammatory bowel disease. The problem is that despite heavy supplementation with probiotic products, often the conditions are not right for restoration of normal bacterial balance. Redeployment of beneficial bacteria in the intestine can only occur in the context of elimination of harmful bacteria and yeasts and the proper nutrient environment that favors the reestablishment of healthy flora. Hence the desirability of dietary strategies such as the Specific Carbohydrate Diet which "breaks the vicious cycle" of bacterial and fungal overgrowth.

Stress certainly plays a role in inflammatory bowel disease. One study evaluated levels of stress in patients with active versus inactive ulcerative colitis. Symptomatic patients were more likely to recall major stressful life events in the previous six months than the asymptomatic group. The authors conclude that life stress is associated with disease activity and ulcerative colitis, but the suggestion is that stress may influence the severity of the disease in susceptible individuals only. Appropriate stress reduction strategies such as biofeedback, relaxation, yoga, t'ai chi, and self-hypnosis may therefore play a role in the management of IBD. Psychotherapy and occasionally antidepressant medication is often useful since patients with this condition suffer from a frustrating series of relapses that impair their social and professional lives.

Many patients who suffer from IBD have been placed on steroids or remain on "maintenance doses." Combined with the debilitation caused by the disease itself, chronic steroid dosing results in depletion of DHEA, an adrenal product that enhances beneficial immune responses and improves stamina. Debilitated patients with ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease often benefit from DHEA supplementation.

Herbs may play a role in the management of ulcerative colitis. Certain demulcent herbs like slippery elm and comfrey have a soothing effect as well as aloe preparations. Paradoxically cayenne, which seems precisely the wrong thing to use in an inflammatory condition, has been shown to gradually act to reduce the inflammatory reaction in colitis. A Chinese stomach formula called ginseng/atractylodes is designed to "nourish the spleen and stomach, improve digestion, and cure diarrhea." It also contains the helpful herb licorice, which has natural steroid-like effects and helps to cure inflammation and ulceration.

Acupuncture can also prove effective in minimizing the symptoms of inflammatory bowel disease. Some of my patients report that the most significant component of their treatment in term of results was acupuncture. They note specific healing effects from this form of energy medicine that are different from the effects of diet modification, herbs and supplements. This is maybe because acupuncture tends to restore balance to organ systems, reestablishing the proper flow of chi through the body, according to ancient formulas. Traditional Chinese Medicine often sees intestinal disorders as disruptions of liver and spleen with inadequate kidney support. One of the dilemmas that confronts the nutritionally-oriented physician in treating inflammatory bowel disease is that the very conduit for essential nutritional support is often inflamed and subject to diarrhea and malabsorption. Aggressive nutritional supplementation creates intestinal distress and may deplete the patient's appetite, thereby inadvertently worsening malnutrition. Hence, a strategy of jump starting the patient is employed with intravenous nutritional support. In no condition is this support so crucial as in inflammatory bowel disease. An intravenous "cocktail" of amino acids and antioxidants along with L-glutamine and B vitamins and crucial magnesium and trace minerals can be provided several times a week until the patient's GI tract heals. Providing nutrition by vein does not run the risk of causing diarrhea or intestinal irritation.

A few cases illustrate this approach to IBD. M.C. was a 20-year-old college student forced to interrupt her studies due to recent onset of ulcerative colitis. The condition was so serious that she was malnourished to the point of losing her periods. When she queried her gastroenterologist as to the desirability of nutritional therapy he said "Don't think of doing that if you want me to remain as your doctor." After consulting me, she found a more congenial gastroenterologist to supervise her care while attempting diet modification with the Specific Carbohydrate Diet of Elaine Gottschall. With this and a combination of nutritional supplements, she improved gradually. It took fully a year for her to recover and regain weight. We were excited to note the return of her regular menstrual cycle. Eighteen months after starting treatment, she shocked her parents by announcing that she was prepared to take a backpacking trip to East Asia. I lightened her supplement load and placed her on a modified version of the diet and to my delight she returned six months later looking better than ever and with no recurrence of her disease.

B.Y. was a 28-year-old ski instructor who was sidelined by severe ulcerated proctitis, a variant of ulcerative colitis that is confined to the lower end of the colon. Having lost 28 pounds, B.Y. initially required IVs to build him up nutritionally. After a period during which he did not respond adequately to diet alone his repeat stool test noted the presence of an unusual intestinal parasite. Through a combination of prescription drugs and natural botanicals, the balance of his intestines was restored. B.Y. did fine for a year, then called me in distress after his symptoms recurred. But he admitted that he was no longer adhering to the diet and even had begun consuming alcohol. A restoration of the diet proved enough to bring him back into remission.

J.S. was a 40-year-old delicatessen owner who had suffered from Crohn's disease since college. He had one of the more dire complications of Crohn's disease, which was a fistula, an infected tract joining his intestine to his bladder, causing him to disconcertingly urinate fecal material. He was constantly, as might be expected, suffering from bladder infections. He had had surgery to create a "pouch" but his pouch was constantly inflamed. He was constantly on antibiotic medication and feeling weak and debilitated. J.S. responded well to the Specific Carbohydrate Diet with modifications to accommodate his specific food allergies based on allergy testing. Initially requiring IVs, J.S. then graduated to oral supplementation. His symptoms gradually diminished and he went off oral antibiotics after we devised a special irrigation formula for his pouch. Although the proprietor of a delicatessen, J.S. happily adheres to the diet, which has provided him with the most substantial relief he has ever had in his long career with IBD.

Countless patients can now attest to the benefits of an innovative nutritionally-based complementary approach to the management of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. While progress may sometimes take time, the vast majority of patients benefited dramatically from interventions designed to restore balance in their intestines, eliminate food allergies and enhance their immune response. Clearly, in lieu of a satisfactory conventional therapy without side effects, this is a vast improvement in the outlook for patients with this disease. Countless patients can now attest to the benefits of an innovative nutritionally-based complementary approach to the management of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. While progress may sometimes take time, the vast majority of patients benefited dramatically from interventions designed to restore balance in their intestines, eliminate food allergies and enhance their immune response. Clearly, in lieu of a satisfactory conventional therapy without side effects, this is a vast improvement in the outlook for patients with this disease.

References
Ending The Vicious Cycle, by Elaine Gottschall (Kirkton, Canada: Kirkton Press)

Tuesday, April 1, 2008

Lialda™ (mesalamine)

“Mesalamine has been associated with a syndrome that may be difficult to distinguish from an ulcerative colitis flare-up. If you experience cramping, abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, fever, headache or rash, prompt withdrawal is required. Some patients taking mesalamine have reported heart-related hypersensitivity reactions, such as inflammation of the heart muscle and inflammation of the lining of the heart. Tell your doctor if you have problems with your liver or kidneys.”

Whoa! If you are unfamiliar with Lialda™, Lialda™ is a new UC treatment option approved by the FDA.

We love the word ‘new’ as it applies to digestive treatment options. All kidding aside, this is the type of “new technology” that makes it to the medicine cabinet of your very bathroom, approved by the FDA and prescribed by doctors who were schmoozed to a nice lunch or dinner, given a print out about how it can help(?) UC patients. All sounds great till you have to “promptly withdraw”.

Prefer the less intrusive, less risky road? We do too… If you’re not on the fence about your health & Ulcerative Colitis, consider SEROVERA
® AMP 500 — an all natural, drug-free, risk-free, dietary supplement that may help reduce flare-ups and achieve remission.

More on SEROVERA
® AMP 500.

*If you are currently prescribed Lialda™, be sure to revisit the “important safety information” section of your brochure.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Foods & Supplements That Can Worsten Diarrhea

If you suffer from Ulcerative Colitis, Crohn’s and have chronic diarrhea the following foods and supplements may contribute to loose stools.

  • Dried beans, corn, vegetables and cabbage family veggies are all high in fiber, which may worsen diarrhea

  • Fruits and juices containing fructose, can worsen diarrhea

  • Caffeine beverages such as coffee and tea can have a laxative effect

  • Alcohol like beer, wine and liquor can worsen diarrhea

  • Fatty meats like bacon, lunch meats, and heavily marbled meats can worsen diarrhea

  • Fried foods, pastries and chips which are high in fat can do the same

  • NutraSweet may even be a problem for some people

  • Too much intake of nuts or nut butters can worsen symptoms

  • Concentrated sweets

  • Dried fruits like figs, dates, raisins and prunes can have a laxative effect

  • Sugar-free gum and mints containing sorbitol, mannitol, and xylitol have been known to have a laxative effect

  • Real black licorice

In addition to the above, several supplements can cause more frequent bowel movements and exacerbate existing diarrhea.

Supplements that can worsen symptoms:
  • 5-HTP

  • Acetyl L-carnitine

  • Activated charcoal

  • Bee pollen

  • Borage oil

  • Bovine colostrum

  • Cayenne

  • Chlorophyll

  • Chondroitin sulfate

  • DHA

  • EPA

  • Flaxseed oil

  • Glucosamine

  • Guarana

  • Guar gum

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Ulcerative Colitis Diet

Sometimes you may feel helpless when facing ulcerative colitis. But changes in your diet and lifestyle may help control your symptoms and lengthen the time between flare-ups.

Ulcerative Colitis Diet

There's no firm evidence that what you eat causes inflammatory bowel disease. But certain foods and beverages can aggravate your symptoms, especially during a flare-up in your condition. It's a good idea to try eliminating from your diet anything that seems to make your signs and symptoms worse. Here are some suggestions that may help:

  • Limit dairy products
    Like many people with inflammatory bowel disease, you may find that problems, such as diarrhea, abdominal pain and gas, improve when you limit or eliminate dairy products. You may be lactose intolerant — that is, your body can't digest the milk sugar (lactose) in dairy foods. If so, try substituting yogurt or low-lactose cheeses, such as Swiss and cheddar, for milk. Or use an enzyme product, such as Lactaid, to help break down lactose. In some cases, you may need to eliminate dairy foods completely. If you need help, a registered dietitian can help you design a healthy diet that's low in lactose. Keep in mind that with limiting your dairy intake, you'll need to find other sources of calcium, such as supplements.

  • Experiment with fiber
    For most people, high-fiber foods, such as fresh fruits and vegetables and whole grains, are the foundation of a healthy diet. But if you have inflammatory bowel disease, fiber may make diarrhea, pain and gas worse. If raw fruits and vegetables bother you, try steaming, baking or stewing them.

    You may also find that you can tolerate some fruits and vegetables, but not others. In general, you may have more problems with foods in the cabbage family, such as broccoli and cauliflower, and with very crunchy foods such as raw apples and carrots.

  • Avoid problem foods
    Eliminate any other foods that seem to make your symptoms worse. These may include "gassy" foods such as beans, cabbage and broccoli, raw fruit juices and fruits — especially citrus fruits — spicy food, popcorn, alcohol, caffeine, and foods and drinks that contain caffeine, such as chocolate and soda.

  • Eat small meals
    You may find you feel better eating five or six small meals rather than two or three larger ones.

  • Drink plenty of liquids
    Try to drink plenty of fluids daily. Water is best. Alcohol and beverages that contain caffeine stimulate your intestines and can make diarrhea worse, while carbonated drinks frequently produce gas.

  • Ask about multivitamins
    Because ulcerative colitis can interfere with your ability to absorb nutrients and because your diet may be limited, vitamin and mineral supplements can play a key role in supplying missing nutrients. They don't provide essential protein and calories, however, and shouldn't be a substitute for meals.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Gut Bacteria and Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Bacteria are present in the normal gut (intestines) and in large numbers the lower parts of the intestine. They achieve concentrations of several billion in the colon. These "normal' bacteria have important function in life:

  • They protect against infection by "bad", or pathogenic, bacteria
  • They help the immune system of the gut to develop
  • They produce a variety of substances, including some essential vitamins, that have an important nutritional value
Together, the normal bacteria are often referred to as the gut flora. A variety of factors may disturb the mutually beneficial relationship between the flora and its host, and disease may result. For example, temporarily suppressing the normal flora in the colon can be a side effect experienced by a susceptible person after taking a course of antibiotics to treat an infection. This then provides the opportunity for bacteria that can cause disease to take hold.

Many consider a different disturbance in the interaction between the flora and the host to be the fundamental cause of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease. In these instances, the type or quantity of bacteria in the gut may not be abnormal' Instead of peaceful and mutually beneficial coexistence, the host responds to the normal bacteria as if they were disease causing. The result is intense inflammation.

Do Bacteria Play a Role in IBS?

The possibility that gut bacteria could have a role in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) may surprise some; there is indeed, now quite substantial evidence to support the idea that disturbances in the bacteria that populate the intestine may have a role in at least some patients with IBS. What is this evidence? It can be summarized as follows:
  1. Surveys which found that antibiotic use, well known to disturb the flora, may predispose individuals to IBS,
  2. The observation that some individuals may develop IBS suddenly, and for the first time, following an episode of stomach or intestinal infection (gastroenteritis) caused by bacterial infection,
  3. Recent evidence that a very low level of inflammation may be present in the bowel wall of some IBS patients, a degree of inflammation that could well have resulted from an abnormal interaction with bacteria in the gut,
  4. The suggestion that at IBS may be associated with the abnormal presence, in the small intestine, of types and numbers of bacteria that are normally found only in the large intestine: a condition termed small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO),
  5. Accumulating evidence to indicate that altering the bacteria in the gut, by antibiotics or probiotics, may improve symptoms in IBS'

Friday, January 18, 2008

Stress & Ulcerative Colitis

Stress reduction


Stress can worsen symptoms of ulcerative colitis. When a person experiences stress, the stomach empties more slowly and secretes more acids. Regular exercise, yoga, massage and meditation are just a few ways to reduce stress.

Deep breathing technique promotes stress reduction, reduces inflammation, eliminates tension throughout the body, and gives you a peaceful state of mind.

How do I start?
  • Lie down and get comfortable. While learning the technique, it may help to keep your eyes closed to help concentrate on your breathing.
  • For now, place your hands on your belly. This helps you feel your belly rise and fall. Once you learn how to deep breathe you can then position your hands where most comfortable.
  • Take in a deep breath to the count of four either through your nose or mouth and feel your belly rise.
  • Pause for a moment at the peak of your breath and then exhale through your relaxed mouth counting to four again. Be aware of your tummy falling.
  • Pause again before taking the next breath.
  • Continue doing this for ten minutes.
Points to remember:
  • Do not try to hurry or breathe fast.
  • Focus on the air you are taking in and how it is cleansing and refreshing your body. When exhaling, release out any tension, anger, or stress you are feeling.
  • Once you are comfortable with the technique of using your belly to deep breathe, try other comfortable positions such as sitting or even standing.
  • Start using deep breathing anytime during the day you are starting to feel stressed. Use it at work when the computer breaks down, at the store while waiting in a long line, or when running late for an appointment and the phone rings! Just get in the habit of using it!
  • You can do deep breathing exercises for longer periods. You can also do just ten deep breaths anytime you need to regain a sense of calm.
  • Belly breathing is so easy to do that once mastered you might also try adding meditation, praying, mental imagery or progressive muscle relaxation during the exercise.

Tuesday, January 15, 2008

Join the Walk to Cure Crohn’s and Colitis

At walk sites across the country, thousands of people will gather to join the fight against digestive diseases. Together they'll raise money for important research and raise awareness of two painful and unpredictable diseases that afflict millions of people.

Help raise funds for important research and help raise awareness of Crohn’s and colitis—register now for the Walk with your local chapter and join in a nation-wide effort to Take Steps for Crohn’s and Colitis. On walk night, you’ll gather with other walkers and help to be heard in your community and across the nation.

Find Local Florida Chapters

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Should you be worried about colorectal cancer?

For people with UC, there are two factors affecting the risk of developing colon cancer. The first factor is that risk increases after 8 to 10 years of active UC. The second is the extent of the disease in the colon. People with disease only in the rectum have the lowest risk; disease in part of the colon involved carries an intermediate risk; disease in the entire colon has the greatest risk. Patients whose disease has been quiet have the same risk as those who have more active disease.

However, more than 90% of IBD patients never develop colon cancer.

Colonoscopies will need to be repeated at regular intervals as determined by the gastroenterologist.

After 8 to 10 years of UC, the doctor may recommend a colonoscopy every year or every two years. A gastroenterologist can make an individualized assessment of colon cancer risk based on history, other risk factors, and the extent and duration of UC.