Colitis
Inflammation of the lining of the colon. Colitis may
affect the entire colon or only parts of it. One type
of colitis is caused by bacterial infection. Sometimes,
this form of the disease occurs after treatment with
antibiotics and is treated with another type of antibiotic.
A more serious type of colitis, ulcerative colitis,
shares many similarities with Crohn disease, and both
disease are considered types of Inflammatory Bowel Disease.
The most common symptom of colitis is blood in the
feces. An attack of diarrhea that contains blood and
pus is a typical sign of colitis. Other symptoms may
include abdominal pain, persistent diarrhea, fever,
and weight loss. An anal fissure (a tear or ulcer in
the lining of the anal canal), an anal fistula (an abnormal
channel between the anal canal and a hole in the skin
surrounding the anus), or an abscess in the anal canal
an also develop.
Diagnosis
Colitis is diagnosed by a complete physical examination
and tests, such as stool analysis, blood tests, a lower
Gastrointestinal (GI) series (an x-ray procedure also
called a barium enema), sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy.
In sigmoidoscopy and colonoscopy, the colon and rectum
are examined by using a slim, flexible, lighted tube
inserted through the anus. The colonoscopy (endoscopy
of the entire colon) is a more extensive procedure than
the sigmoidoscopy (an endoscopy of the rectum and sigmoid
colon). A biopsy (analysis of a tissue sample) can confirm
the presence of ulcerative colitis.
Source: AMA Complete Medical Encyclopedia,
Copyright 2003, American Medical Association
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