Treatment Overview
The main treatment for
is medicine to stop the inflammation
in the intestine and medicine to prevent flare-ups and keep you in
. A few people have severe, persistent
symptoms or complications that may require a stronger medicine, a combination
of medicines, or surgery. The type of symptoms you have and how bad they are
will determine the treatment you need.
Initial treatment
Your doctor will most likely
start with the traditional first-line treatment for
Crohn's disease. He or she will then add or change
medicines if you are not getting better.
Mild symptoms may respond to an
antidiarrheal medicine such as loperamide (Imodium, for example), which slows or stops the painful spasms in your intestines
that cause symptoms.
For mild to moderate symptoms, your doctor will probably have you take:
- (such as sulfasalazine
or mesalamine). These medicines help manage symptoms for many people who have
Crohn's disease.
- (such as ciprofloxacin or metronidazole). These may be tried if aminosalicylates are not helping. They are also used to treat and abscesses.
- (such as budesonide or prednisone).
These may be given by mouth for a few weeks or months to control inflammation.
But corticosteroids have serious side effects, such as high blood pressure,
, and increased risk of infection.
- Medicines that suppress the
(called
), such as azathioprine or mercaptopurine. You may take these if the
medicines listed above do not work, if your symptoms come back when you stop
taking corticosteroids, or if your symptoms come back often, even with
treatment.
- (such as
infliximab or adalimumab). Your doctor may have you try these medicines if you have
not had success with other medicines for Crohn's disease. In some cases, these
medicines are tried before some of the other medicines that are listed above.
They are also used to treat fistulas.
Severe symptoms may be treated
with corticosteroids given through a vein (intravenous, IV) or biologics.
With severe symptoms, the first step is to control the disease. When your
symptoms are gone, your doctor will probably have you start taking one of the
medicines listed above to keep you symptom-free (in remission).
Ongoing treatment
Ongoing treatment is designed to
find a medicine or combination of medicines that keeps
in remission.
If
aminosalicylates or immune system
suppressors keep your disease in remission, you will continue taking the
medicines. Your doctor will want to see you about every 6 months if your
condition is stable or more frequently if you have flare-ups. You may have
lab tests every 2 to 3 months.