{"id":129,"date":"2017-12-14T09:04:27","date_gmt":"2017-12-14T09:04:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.4ahealthygut.com\/?p=129"},"modified":"2018-03-02T12:59:15","modified_gmt":"2018-03-02T12:59:15","slug":"crohns-disease-treatment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.4ahealthygut.com\/crohns-disease-treatment\/","title":{"rendered":"Crohn’s disease: A guide to Treatment for Crohn\u2019s Disease"},"content":{"rendered":"

Crohn\u2019s disease is a chronic, debilitating, as yet incurable inflammatory bowel disease that can cause lesions and inflammation of the gut and bowels.<\/p>\n

Patients with Crohn’s disease<\/strong><\/a> typically experience stomach pain, severe diarrhea, nutritional deficiencies, fatigue, and weight loss.<\/p>\n

Crohn\u2019s disease affects everyone differently, attacking different areas of the long digestive tract.<\/p>\n

Unfortunately, the inflammation Crohn\u2019s disease causes to develop in the body spreads from the intestinal tract to the bowel tissue and can lead to other debilitating diseases and conditions<\/a><\/strong> that may or may not be deadly, including cancers of the bowel and gut.<\/p>\n

Although there is no cure for Crohn\u2019s as of yet, new treatments are being discovered every day as we learn more and more about the complex gut system which actually hosts around 70%. Of our immune system.<\/p>\n

Today, we know a lot more about the gut than ever before, which is reassuring. We now know, for example, that the gut is directly linked to something called our enteric nervous system<\/a><\/strong> and is linked with mental disorders of many kinds from anxiety to depression.<\/p>\n

Gut problems are becoming more and more widespread throughout the world. Because of this, research into how to heal debilitating gut disorders like Crohn\u2019s, colitis, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is ongoing, and new treatments that ease the symptoms of Crohn\u2019s are constantly being discovered.<\/p>\n

Crohn’s disease symptoms and signs<\/span><\/h2>\n

Crohn\u2019s symptoms<\/strong><\/a> can vary during flare-ups of the disease and can range from mild to severe after the onset of the disease and as the disease progresses.<\/p>\n

Crohn\u2019s tends to manifest in the body in flare-ups and periods of remission, so rather than gradually progressing toward an excruciating level of pain, thank goodness, patients tend to experience periods of flare-ups, then periods of remission without symptoms, depending upon how well they are eating and taking care of themselves.<\/p>\n

Common symptoms of Crohn\u2019s in the early stages<\/a> are<\/strong><\/p>\n