AI Article Synopsis

  • The paper aims to increase awareness of microscopic colitis (MC), a chronic inflammatory bowel disease, focusing on its recognition, risk factors, diagnosis, management, and complications.
  • MC is characterized by nonspecific symptoms like watery diarrhea, which makes diagnosis challenging, and the average onset age is around 62-65 years, with women being more affected.
  • Risk factors for MC include lifestyle factors like smoking and alcohol consumption, various medications, and other health conditions; treatment typically involves budesonide or other therapies tailored to individual cases.

Article Abstract

The aim of this paper is to raise awareness of MC as a clinically significant condition and to highlight its under-recognition, risk factors, diagnosis, management, and complications. This paper underlines the diagnostic and therapeutic challenges associated with the often nonspecific symptoms of MC. In order to create this article, we reviewed available articles found in the PubMed database and searched for articles using the Google Scholar platform. Microscopic colitis (MC) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease, classified into three types: lymphocytic, collagenous, and unspecified. The average age of onset of MC is around 62-65 years and the disease is more common in women than men (nine times more common). The main symptom of MC is watery diarrhoea without blood, other symptoms include defecatory urgency, faecal incontinence, abdominal pain, nocturnal bowel movements, and weight loss. Once considered a rare disease, MC is now being diagnosed with increasing frequency, but diagnosis remains difficult. To date, a number of causative factors for MC have been identified, including smoking, alcohol consumption, medications (including NSAIDs, PPIs, SSRIs, and ICPIs), genetic factors, autoimmune diseases, bile acid malabsorption, obesity, appendicitis, and intestinal dysbiosis. It may be difficult to recognize and should be differentiated from inflammatory bowel diseases (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis), irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), coeliac disease, infectious bowel disease, and others. Diagnosis involves biopsy at colonoscopy and histopathological evaluation of the samples. Treatment consists of budesonide oral (the gold standard) or enema. Alternatives include bile acid sequestrants (cholestyramine, colesevelam, and colestipol), biologics (infliximab, adalimumab, and vedolizumab), thiopurines, methotrexate, and rarely, surgery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11476874PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm13195683DOI Listing

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