Ileitis Explained

Ileitis
Field:Gastroenterology

Ileitis is an inflammation of the ileum, a portion of the small intestine. Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection may mimic Crohn's disease Ileitis.[1] Ileitis may be linked to a broad range of illnesses, such as sarcoidosis, amyloidosis, ischemia, neoplasms, spondyloarthropathies, vasculitides, drug-related conditions, and eosinophilic enteritis.[2] `

Signs and symptoms

When it comes to ileitis, the majority of cases are caused by an acute, self-limited form of lower right quadrant pain and/or diarrhea. However, other conditions, such as M. tuberculosis or vasculitis, can cause chronic, debilitating symptoms that are complicated by hemorrhage, obstructive symptoms, and/or extraintestinal manifestations. Unless symptoms indicate that additional testing is necessary, ileitis linked to spondyloarthropathy or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs is usually subclinical and goes unnoticed.[2]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Gurzu . Simona . Molnar . Calin . Contac . Anca Otilia . Fetyko . Annamaria . Jung . Ioan . 2016-09-16 . Tuberculosis terminal ileitis: A forgotten entity mimicking Crohn's disease . World Journal of Clinical Cases . 4 . 9 . 273–280 . 10.12998/wjcc.v4.i9.273 . free . 2307-8960 . 5018625 . 27672643.
  2. DiLauro . Steven . Crum-Cianflone . Nancy F. . Ileitis: When It is Not Crohn's Disease . Current Gastroenterology Reports . Springer Science and Business Media LLC . 12 . 4 . June 8, 2010 . 1522-8037 . 10.1007/s11894-010-0112-5 . 249–258 . free. 20532706 . 2914216 .