New Concepts in the Pathophysiology of Inflammatory Bowel Disease

  1. Giorgos Bamias, MD;
  2. Mark R. Nyce, MD;
  3. Sarah A. De La Rue, PhD; and
  4. Fabio Cominelli, MD, PhD
  1. From University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia.

    PHYSIOLOGY IN MEDICINE: A SERIES OF ARTICLES LINKING MEDICINE WITH SCIENCE

    Co-sponsored by the American College of Physicians and the American Physiological Society

    Physiology in Medicine: Dennis A. Ausiello, MD, Editor; Dale J. Benos, PhD, Deputy Editor; Francois Abboud, MD, Associate Editor; William J. Koopman, MD, Associate Editor

    Annals of Internal Medicine: Paul Epstein, MD, Series Editor

    Clinical Principles

    The inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), that is, Crohn disease and ulcerative colitis, affect approximately 1 million persons in North America and several million persons worldwide.

    Approximately 30% of patients present between 10 and 30 years of age.

    Current therapeutic options are limited and include nonspecific anti-inflammatory and immunosuppresive medications.

    Surgery is required for 50% to 80% of patients with Crohn disease, while only 20% of patients with ulcerative colitis have surgery.

    Novel biological therapeutics have greatly improved the quality of life of patients with IBD.

    Pathophysiologic Principles

    Both genetic and environmental factors play important roles in disease pathogenesis.

    New hypotheses implicate the innate immune system and the intestinal epithelium in the pathogenesis of the disease.

    Lymphocytes, cytokines, and adhesion molecules are dysregulated and have been targeted for therapeutic intervention.

    Based on a new understanding of the complicated mechanisms that underlie the disease process, combination therapies are currently being pursued.

    A better understanding of the pathophysiologic mechanisms will aid in prevention and more effective maintenance of remission of IBDs.

    Ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease are collectively called the inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) because of such similarities as a chronic remitting and relapsing course, their inflammatory nature, and their unknown causes. Nevertheless, these 2 disorders are clearly separated by distinct clinicopathologic features, including different locations within the gastrointestinal tract, diverse histologic patterns of inflammation, and the various disease-specific complications. Data that diverge from the traditionally accepted view of the pathogenesis of IBDs have recently been published …

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