Ulcerative Colitis and Crohn's Disease are among the chronic inflammatory bowel diseases.
Common symptoms include diarrhea, constipation (in advanced stages), fever, frequent defecation, abdominal pain, inflamed-bloody stools, anemia, weakness and weight loss. Genetic and environmental factors are effective in the formation of the disease.
These two diseases affect different parts of the gastrointestinal tract. While ulcerative colitis causes widespread involvement in the large intestine, Crohn's disease may partially affect several parts of the entire digestive system, from the mouth to the anus, especially the small intestines.
In young and middle-aged patients, the sym ptoms are slightly more severe. In both diseases, attacks and recovery periods follow each other. In the areas of involvement, ulcerations in the intestinal wall, bleeding, inflammation, thickening, irregularity, narrowing of the intestinal lumen are seen.
DIAGNOSIS
Blood-stool analysis
Endoscopy
Colonoscopy
MRI
Biopsy
TREATMENT
1.) Medical Treatment
Antibiotic
Cortisone
Immunosuppressant drugs
Biological treatments
2.) Surgical treatment
If perforation, abscess or fistula occurs in the stomach or intestines, surgical treatment is applied.
3.) Ozone therapy
Ozone therapy improves the circulation-oxygenation of damaged, inflamed intestinal cells and tissues and provides healing. It improves the body's antioxidant system and regulates the immune system.
It is applied in two ways
- Major autohemotherapy
A total of 10-15 sessions are applied twice a week. Via vascular access approximately 100-125 ml of blood is taken into a special ozone bottle. The ozonated blood in the bottle is given to the patient again through the same vein. This process takes about 30 minutes.
- Rectal ozone therapy
A total of 10-15 sessions are applied, twice a week. With the help of a thin, plastic probe that is advanced into the rectum, ozone gas is given directly to the colon. The process takes about 10 minutes.
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