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Tratamiento de la enfermedad de Crohn en Santa Margarita, CA

La enfermedad de Crohn es una afección inflamatoria crónica que afecta al tracto gastrointestinal (GI). A diferencia de la colitis ulcerosa, que suele afectar sólo al colon, la enfermedad de Crohn puede afectar a cualquier segmento del tubo digestivo, desde la boca hasta el colon. Sin embargo, lo más frecuente es que se produzca al final del intestino delgado (íleon) y al principio del colon. Si usted está experimentando síntomas o tiene preocupaciones acerca de la enfermedad de Crohn, llegar al Dr. Albert Chung, un especialista colorrectal con sede en Santa Margarita, al servicio de los pacientes en todo el Condado de Orange. Llame a nuestra clínica colorrectal hoy en (714) 988-8690 para el nivel de expertos, la atención compasiva.

Crohn's Disease
Crohn's is chronic, but it's more manageable now than ever before.
Modern medications, targeted nutrition, and when needed surgery give most patients long stretches of remission and a good quality of life.

Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) that can affect any part of the digestive tract, from the mouth to the anus. It most often involves the end of the small intestine and the beginning of the colon. Like ulcerative colitis, it follows a pattern of flares and remissions, with inflammation that can extend through the full thickness of the bowel wall. While the exact cause remains unclear, experts believe genetic predisposition, immune system dysfunction, and environmental triggers all play a role. Dietary habits and stress can aggravate symptoms but do not directly cause the disease.

Managing a Crohn's diagnosis or navigating a flare? Book a consultation.
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Crohn's Disease at a Glance

Efectos
Any part of the GI tract
Patrón
Patchy, full-thickness
Curso
Brotes y remisiones
Edad de aparición
Most common 15 to 35

How It Differs from Ulcerative Colitis

Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis are both forms of IBD, and they share many symptoms. The differences matter clinically. Crohn's can affect any part of the digestive tract, with patches of inflammation separated by healthy tissue (often called "skip lesions"). The inflammation can extend through the entire bowel wall, which is why Crohn's more commonly causes strictures, fistulas, and abscesses.

Ulcerative colitis, by contrast, affects only the colon and rectum with continuous inflammation limited to the bowel's inner lining. Another key difference: surgery does not cure Crohn's. Inflammation can return in previously unaffected areas of the GI tract, even after a segment is removed.

Síntomas comunes

Crohn's symptoms vary widely from mild to severe depending on where inflammation occurs and how active the disease is. Common signs include:

Abdominal cramps and pain
Diarrea persistente
Deposiciones urgentes
Hemorragia rectal
Fiebre
Fatiga
Weight loss and loss of appetite
Sudores nocturnos
Mouth sores (aphthous ulcers)

Perianal Crohn's disease is common and can cause additional symptoms including anal pain, drainage, skin tags, fistulas, and abscesses. Crohn's can also produce symptoms outside the digestive tract, including joint pain, eye inflammation, and skin problems. These can appear alongside GI symptoms or sometimes before them.

Causas y factores de riesgo

The exact cause of Crohn's disease remains unclear, but several factors influence risk.

Family history
Having a first-degree relative with IBD significantly raises risk. Genetics plays a substantial role.
Age
Most commonly diagnosed between 15 and 35, with a second smaller peak between 50 and 70.
Fumar
The most important modifiable risk factor. Smoking significantly worsens Crohn's disease, increases flare frequency, raises complication risk, and reduces how well treatments work. Quitting meaningfully improves outcomes.
Ethnicity
Higher rates among people of Ashkenazi Jewish heritage. Crohn's occurs in all populations, with increasing rates globally.
Environment
Higher incidence in urban areas and Western countries. Early-life factors, including antibiotic use and diet, may influence risk.
Medicamentos
Frequent NSAID use may trigger flares in some patients, although it isn't a direct cause of the disease.
Immune system factors
Abnormal immune responses to bacteria in the GI tract appear to drive the chronic inflammation seen in Crohn's.

How Crohn's Disease Is Diagnosed

At your initial consultation, Dr. Chung will thoroughly discuss your symptoms, lifestyle, and medical history to build a complete picture of your condition. Diagnostic testing confirms Crohn's and distinguishes it from other conditions like ulcerative colitis, IBS, or infection.

Colonoscopia con biopsia
Examines the colon and end of the small intestine, with tissue samples taken to confirm inflammation patterns characteristic of Crohn's.
Upper endoscopy
Used when upper GI involvement is suspected, examining the esophagus, stomach, and first part of the small intestine.
CT or MR enterography
Specialized imaging that provides detailed views of the small intestine, which standard colonoscopy can't reach. Helpful for assessing the full extent of disease.
Análisis de sangre
Check for anemia, inflammation markers, nutritional deficiencies, and signs of infection.
Análisis de heces
Assess inflammation markers (fecal calprotectin) and rule out infectious causes of diarrhea.

Treatment Approaches

Treatment focuses on inducing and maintaining remission, reducing inflammation, healing the GI tract, and improving quality of life. Dr. Chung will tailor your plan to your symptoms, disease location, and severity.

Primera línea
Medicación
Medications are typically the starting point. Options include corticosteroids for active flares, immunomodulators (such as azathioprine or methotrexate), and biologic therapies like anti-TNF agents, anti-integrin agents, and anti-interleukin therapies. While medications don't cure Crohn's, they can induce and maintain remission, reduce flare frequency, and help the GI tract heal.
Solidario
Nutritional and dietary management
Diet doesn't cause Crohn's, but it can affect symptoms. Dr. Chung provides personalized dietary guidance, helping identify and avoid trigger foods while supporting nutrition during and between flares. Addressing nutrient deficiencies (iron, B12, vitamin D) is often part of long-term care.
Cuando sea necesario
Cirugía
Roughly 70 percent of people with Crohn's disease will need surgery at some point, typically for complications like strictures (narrowed areas), fistulas, abscesses, or severe disease that hasn't responded to medication. Surgery provides substantial relief but does not cure Crohn's, so ongoing medical management usually continues after surgery.

Opciones quirúrgicas

When surgery is the right answer, the specific approach depends on what the disease is doing and where. Dr. Chung will walk you through the options.

Bowel resection
Removing diseased segments
The affected portion of bowel is removed and the healthy ends are reconnected. Most commonly performed for strictures or severe inflammation in a specific segment. Can often be done minimally invasively.
Strictureplasty
Widening without removing
A bowel-sparing technique that widens narrowed areas without removing intestinal length. Especially valuable in Crohn's, where patients may need multiple surgeries over a lifetime and preserving bowel length matters.

Perianal Crohn's disease often requires specific procedures for fistulas and abscesses. Dr. Chung has particular expertise in this area, which can meaningfully improve day-to-day quality of life.

Long-term cancer surveillance: People with long-standing Crohn's disease involving the colon have an elevated risk of colorectal cancer. Regular surveillance colonoscopies are an important part of long-term care. Dr. Chung can advise on the right screening schedule for your situation.

Recuperación y gestión continua

Crohn's is a long-term condition that benefits from a long-term partnership with a care team. For patients on medical management, the goal is to achieve and maintain remission on the lowest effective dose of medication, with regular monitoring to catch flares early.

After surgical treatment, detailed aftercare instructions and follow-up visits help ensure a smooth recovery. Most patients return to regular activities and experience meaningful symptom relief. Because Crohn's can recur in new areas, ongoing medical therapy is often continued after surgery to reduce that risk.

Get expert Crohn's care

Whether you're newly diagnosed, working through a flare, dealing with perianal disease, or considering surgery, Dr. Chung can help you build a plan that fits your disease and your life.

Reserva una consulta Llame al (714) 988-8690

Preguntas más frecuentes

¿Se puede curar la enfermedad de Crohn?

En la actualidad, la enfermedad de Crohn no tiene cura definitiva; sin embargo, un control y un tratamiento eficaces pueden mejorar significativamente los síntomas y la calidad de vida.

¿Es siempre necesaria la cirugía para la enfermedad de Crohn?

La cirugía no siempre es necesaria y suele reservarse para casos graves o complicaciones que no pueden tratarse eficazmente con medicación y cambios en el estilo de vida.

¿Cómo puede influir la dieta en la enfermedad de Crohn?

Los cambios dietéticos reducen significativamente la inflamación, previenen los brotes y mejoran la salud digestiva. El Dr. Chung le ofrecerá recomendaciones dietéticas específicas adaptadas a sus necesidades individuales.

¿Aún tiene preguntas?

Estamos aquí para escucharte mientras te curas. No dudes en ponerte en contacto con nosotros.

Programe su consulta para explorar la enfermedad de Crohn.

El diagnóstico y tratamiento oportunos mejoran en gran medida los resultados del cáncer colorrectal. Llame a la clínica colorrectal del Dr. Albert Chung en el condado de Orange.