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I have UC, it is an inflammatory bowel disorder.
Your body attacks all the bacteria in your intestines and kills it, this in turn makes your intestines bleed. Than you bleed everytime you have a bowel movement. Sometimes there is mucus in the bowel movement.
This is all very disturbing the first 100 times it happens. And if you have UC you might have run to the bathroom 5-10 times a day for a week, or two or for months. You may lose tons of weight and need to be hospitalized. You may become depressed. You may stop eating or drinking certain foods, and start eating other foods, this helps some and does nothing for others.
What to do: Go to a doctor, get diagnosed, than get medicine.
Colazol really helped me. The steroid predizone also helps very quickly, but side effects are bad.
Sometimes medicine doesn’t work and that means a year or two of suffering and than removal of part of your intestines or all of your intestines and a colostomy bag, not an easy way to live, but so many people have one. I feel fortunate medicine has worked for me.
There is a lot of great info on line. Note: Get screened for colon cancer as well, UC can lead to colon cancer.
I work at one of the many Camp Oasis programs for kids with Crohns and UC. So many people live with UC, you can too. The first six months were hellish, but now that I’m in remission, I only get very sick once or twice a year, it’s still a little upsetting, but I foverall I feel great and I have a much greater appreciation of my health.
Check out the Crohns and Colitis foundation of America.
Hope all this info helps.
Heres something from the Mayo clinic.
Ulcerative colitis (Colitis ulcerosa, UC) is a form of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).[1] Ulcerative colitis is a form of colitis, a disease of the intestine, specifically the large intestine or colon, that includes characteristic ulcers, or open sores, in the colon. The main symptom of active disease is usually constant diarrhea mixed with blood, of gradual onset. Ulcerative colitis is, however, a systemic disease that affects many parts of the body outside the intestine. Because of the name, IBD is often confused with irritable bowel syndrome ("IBS"), a troublesome, but much less serious condition. Ulcerative colitis has similarities to Crohn’s disease, another form of IBD. Ulcerative colitis is an intermittent disease, with periods of exacerbated symptoms, and periods that are relatively symptom-free. Although the symptoms of ulcerative colitis can sometimes diminish on their own, the disease usually requires treatment to go into remission.
Ulcerative colitis occurs in 35-100 people for every 100,000 in the United States,[2] or less than 0.1% of the population. The disease tends to be more common in northern areas. Although ulcerative colitis has no known cause, there is a presumed genetic component to susceptibility. The disease may be triggered in a susceptible person by environmental factors. Although dietary modification may reduce the discomfort of a person with the disease, ulcerative colitis is not thought to be caused by dietary factors. Although ulcerative colitis is treated as though it were an autoimmune disease, there is no consensus that it is such. Treatment is with anti-inflammatory drugs, immunosuppression, and biological therapy targeting specific components of the immune response. Colectomy (partial or total removal of the large bowel through surgery) is occasionally necessary, and is considered to be a cure for the disease.
google.
what about ulcerative coitus? It’s from the hardcore stuff.
Ulcerative colitis is a form of colitis, a disease of the intestine, specifically the large intestine or colon, that includes characteristic ulcers, or open sores, in the colon. The main symptom of active disease is usually constant diarrhea mixed with blood, of gradual onset. Ulcerative colitis is, however, a systemic disease that affects many parts of the body outside the intestine.
Patients usually present with diarrhea mixed with blood and mucus, of gradual onset. They also may have signs of weight loss, and blood on rectal examination. The disease is usually accompanied with different degrees of abdominal pain, from mild discomfort to severely painful cramps.
If you suspect that you have this disease you should go to a doctor as soon as possible. there are treatments and you can get help.
To keep it short, Ulcerative Colitis is an auto-immune disese of the digestive tract (colon and/or rectum are most common sites). Usually patients with Ulcerative colitis present with bloody, mucous filled diarrhea that occurs many times a day.
Unfortunately, about 30% of the patients i see with uc eventually require sugery, but surgury usually brings an end to symptoms. Also, patients with untreated uc are at a much greater risk for colorectal cancer. UC is usually treated with a variety of anti-inflammatory drugs (corticosteroids and even NSAIDS like ibuprofen). If you think you have this condition you should check up with your doctor.