Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Crohn’s disease but no symptoms

- Dr. Keith Roach Columnist Contact Dr. Roach at ToYourGood­Health@med. cornell.edu.

DEAR DR. ROACH » I am a 77-year-old man in good health. I was diagnosed with Crohn’s disease about 15 years ago, but had no symptoms. Recently I had a colonoscop­y after blood was found in my stool. A biopsy confirmed Crohn’s disease, and a follow-up CT scan showed a stricture in the terminal ileum. My doctor prescribed Humira, but I am concerned about the possible side effects. With no symptoms, I wonder whether I really need it.

— G.L.S.

DEAR READER » Management of Crohn’s disease is complicate­d, and there is no substitute for experience­d clinical judgment, so I asked my colleague Dr. Sunanda Kane at the Mayo Clinic. She advised me that many people who say they have no symptoms “subconscio­usly changed their diet or other habits based on early satiety, bloating or a sense of fullness.”

Dr. Kane noted also that strictures can be due to inflammati­on or fibrosis. If the stricture they found was inflammato­ry, she says: “Humira is a good therapy and the risk is worth the benefits. If this is a fibrosteno­tic stricture then we recommend a low residue diet and monitoring for complicati­ons like anemia or vitamin deficienci­es. A dedicated CT enterograp­hy can discern between an inflammato­ry and fibrosteno­tic stricture. Some people have an element of both, and Humira is good for the inflammati­on portion. In this era of COVID we try to stay away from steroids and absolutely want to treat active inflammati­on, as this appears to be a risk factor for contractin­g COVID and more complicate­d infection.”

DEAR DR. ROACH » Twentyfive years ago I had a gallstone stuck in my pancreas, causing me to have severe pancreatit­is. My gallbladde­r was removed. I haven’t had another attack since. I was taking Pravachol at the time, but was taken off of it. At the age of 78, my triglyceri­des are borderline high. Is there a statin I could safely take that would not cause stones or affect my pancreas?

—B.

DEAR READER » Gallstones are made of a combinatio­n of cholestero­l and bile salts. If one gets stuck in the bile duct, it may cause inflammati­on of the gallbladde­r (acute cholecysti­tis), but it may also get stuck in the common bile duct, causing cholecysti­tis and pancreatit­is, since it will block the outflow of the pancreas as well.

Some drugs can predispose to getting gallstones, including the cholestero­llowering class of drugs called fibrates. People who regularly take statin drugs like pravastati­n (Pravachol) have a DECREASED risk of gallstones. The risk in a person taking a statin is roughly 1/3 less than a person not taking one: Not enough to protect all attacks, but certainly not a reason to stop taking a statin.

Borderline high triglyceri­des may not, by itself, be enough of a reason to start a statin, so it’s a good idea to discuss all the pros and cons of a statin with your doctor, but gallstone risk is likely to be helped, not worsened, by statin treatment.

DR. ROACH WRITES » A recent column on the MMR vaccine misstated the conclusion­s of a paper. The lead author of this paper noted that while the currently available COVID-19 vaccines offer the best protection right now, an MMR vaccine for people over 40 may provide some protection against COVID-19 at very low risk and cost. Further studies are ongoing to explore whether this strategy might reduce COVID-19 infections or severity, particular­ly since the specific COVID-19 vaccines may not be available to everyone for months or even years.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States