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colitis

Colitis is inflammation of the lining of the colon. It is a broad term for conditions that cause similar symptoms, including diarrhea, abdominal pain, and sometimes blood in stool. Colitis may be acute or chronic and can occur on its own or as part of other diseases.

Major causes include infectious colitis (bacterial, viral, parasitic), ischemic colitis from reduced blood flow, inflammatory colitis

Symptoms vary but commonly include diarrhea, cramping or lower abdominal pain, urgency, and sometimes rectal bleeding

Treatment targets the underlying cause and supportive care. Infectious colitis may require antibiotics or antiparasitics, with

such
as
ulcerative
colitis
and
Crohn's
disease
involving
the
colon,
microscopic
colitis
(collagenous
or
lymphocytic
colitis)
characterized
by
watery
diarrhea,
radiation
colitis
after
pelvic
radiation,
and
chemical
or
drug-induced
colitis.
or
mucus.
Fever,
weight
loss,
and
dehydration
may
occur
in
more
extensive
disease
or
infection.
Diagnosis
relies
on
history,
physical
examination,
stool
studies
to
detect
infection,
blood
tests,
and
colonoscopy
with
biopsy;
imaging
may
be
used
to
evaluate
complications.
fluids
and
electrolyte
management.
Inflammatory
colitis
often
uses
5-aminosalicylates,
corticosteroids,
and
may
progress
to
immunomodulators
or
biologic
therapies.
Microscopic
colitis
generally
responds
to
budesonide.
Ischemic
colitis
and
radiation
colitis
are
managed
based
on
severity
and
may
require
procedures.
Some
cases
need
surgery.
Prognosis
depends
on
the
cause
and
extent;
many
forms
are
controllable,
but
complications
can
occur.