💢 Crohn's Disease
A comprehensive guide to understanding and managing Crohn's disease
Last reviewed: February 2026
📖 What is Crohn's Disease?
Crohn's disease is a type of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) that causes chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract. Unlike ulcerative colitis, which affects only the colon, Crohn's can affect any part of the digestive system from the mouth to the anus.
Key characteristics of Crohn's disease include:
- Transmural inflammation: Affects all layers of the intestinal wall, not just the surface
- Skip lesions: Areas of diseased intestine separated by normal segments
- Most common location: Terminal ileum (end of small intestine) and beginning of colon
- Complications: Can lead to fistulas, strictures, and abscesses due to deep inflammation
Crohn's disease is named after Dr. Burrill B. Crohn, who first described the condition in 1932. It is a lifelong condition with no current cure, but with modern treatments, many patients achieve long-term remission.
📍 Disease Location & Behavior
Crohn's disease is classified by location and behavior, which helps guide treatment decisions.
Montreal Classification - Location
| Type | Location | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| L1 - Ileal | Terminal ileum only | ~30% |
| L2 - Colonic | Colon only | ~20% |
| L3 - Ileocolonic | Both ileum and colon | ~50% |
| L4 - Upper GI | Esophagus, stomach, or duodenum (modifier) | ~15% |
Disease Behavior
- B1 - Inflammatory (non-stricturing, non-penetrating): Inflammation without complications; most common at diagnosis
- B2 - Stricturing: Narrowing of the intestine due to scar tissue; can cause blockages
- B3 - Penetrating: Fistulas or abscesses form due to deep inflammation
- p - Perianal disease: Modifier indicating involvement around the anus
🚨 Symptoms
Symptoms vary based on disease location and severity. They typically develop gradually but can appear suddenly.
Common Symptoms
- Abdominal pain: Often in lower right abdomen, worse after eating
- Chronic diarrhea: May or may not contain blood
- Weight loss: Due to reduced appetite and malabsorption
- Fatigue: Often severe and debilitating
- Fever: Low-grade, especially during flares
- Mouth ulcers: Painful sores inside the mouth
- Reduced appetite
- Growth delay: In children and adolescents
Symptoms by Location
- Small bowel: Crampy abdominal pain, diarrhea, weight loss, malnutrition
- Colon: Bloody diarrhea, urgency, cramping
- Upper GI: Nausea, vomiting, difficulty swallowing, early fullness
- Perianal: Pain around anus, drainage, skin tags, fistulas
Extraintestinal Manifestations
Crohn's can affect other parts of the body:
- Joints: Arthritis of large joints, spine (sacroiliitis)
- Skin: Erythema nodosum, pyoderma gangrenosum
- Eyes: Episcleritis, uveitis
- Liver: Primary sclerosing cholangitis (rare)
- Kidneys: Kidney stones (oxalate stones)
- Blood: Increased clotting risk
⚠️ Complications
Crohn's disease can lead to serious complications due to the nature of transmural (full-thickness) inflammation.
Intestinal Complications
Chronic inflammation leads to scar tissue formation, narrowing the intestinal passage. Symptoms include crampy pain after eating, bloating, nausea, and vomiting. May require balloon dilation or surgery.
Abnormal tunnels that form between the intestine and other organs or skin. Types include enterovesical (to bladder), enterocutaneous (to skin), enteroenteral (to other bowel loops), and perianal. Require medical and often surgical treatment.
Pockets of infection that form when inflammation extends through the bowel wall. Cause fever, pain, and elevated inflammatory markers. Treatment includes antibiotics and drainage.
A hole in the intestinal wall, allowing contents to leak. This is a medical emergency requiring immediate surgery.
Other Complications
- Malnutrition: From poor absorption, especially of vitamins B12, D, iron, zinc
- Osteoporosis: From vitamin D deficiency, malabsorption, and steroid use
- Colorectal cancer: Increased risk with long-standing colonic disease
- Short bowel syndrome: After multiple bowel resections
🔍 Diagnosis
Diagnosing Crohn's requires combining clinical assessment, laboratory tests, imaging, and endoscopy.
Initial Evaluation
- Medical history: Symptom timeline, family history of IBD
- Physical examination: Abdominal tenderness, perianal examination
- Blood tests: CBC, CRP, ESR, liver function, vitamin levels
- Stool tests: Fecal calprotectin (inflammation marker), stool culture
Endoscopy
- Colonoscopy with ileoscopy: Visualizes colon and end of small intestine; allows biopsies
- Upper endoscopy: If upper GI symptoms present
- Capsule endoscopy: Pill camera to view entire small bowel
- Balloon enteroscopy: For small bowel intervention
Imaging
- MR Enterography (MRE): Gold standard for small bowel assessment; no radiation
- CT Enterography: Alternative when MRI not available
- Intestinal ultrasound: Non-invasive, good for monitoring
- Pelvic MRI: For perianal disease evaluation
💊 Treatment
Treatment goals include inducing remission, maintaining remission, healing the intestinal lining (mucosal healing), and preventing complications. Treatment is individualized based on disease severity, location, and complications.
Treatment Approach by Severity
| Severity | Characteristics | Treatment Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Mild | Ambulatory, eating/drinking normally, mild symptoms | Budesonide, 5-ASA, diet optimization |
| Moderate | More significant symptoms, failed initial therapy | Steroids, immunomodulators, biologics |
| Severe | Hospitalization, significant complications | IV steroids, biologics, possible surgery |
Medications
Corticosteroids
For inducing remission during flares. Options include prednisone (systemic) and budesonide (more targeted, fewer side effects). Not for long-term maintenance due to side effects including bone loss, weight gain, and diabetes.
Immunomodulators
- Azathioprine/6-mercaptopurine: Steroid-sparing maintenance agents; take 2-3 months to work
- Methotrexate: Alternative immunomodulator, weekly injection or oral
Biologics
- Anti-TNF agents: Infliximab (IV), adalimumab (injection), certolizumab - most established class
- Anti-integrin: Vedolizumab - gut-selective, fewer systemic effects
- Anti-IL-12/23: Ustekinumab - IV loading then subcutaneous maintenance
- Anti-IL-23: Risankizumab - newer option with good efficacy and safety
Small Molecules
- JAK inhibitors: Upadacitinib - oral option now approved for Crohn's
Surgery
About 70% of Crohn's patients will need surgery at some point. Surgery is not curative, as disease can recur. Indications include:
- Failed medical therapy
- Strictures causing obstruction
- Fistulas not responding to medication
- Abscesses
- Perforation
- Cancer or high-grade dysplasia
Surgical options include bowel resection (removing diseased segment) and strictureplasty (widening strictures without removal).
🍎 Diet & Nutrition
Exclusive Enteral Nutrition (EEN)
A complete liquid diet using specialized formulas. As effective as steroids for inducing remission in children and adolescents. Also used in adults. Promotes mucosal healing with fewer side effects than steroids.
Dietary Considerations
- During flares: Low-residue, low-fiber diet; avoid irritating foods
- During remission: Balanced diet; may tolerate more variety
- If strictures present: Avoid high-fiber, tough textures that could cause blockage
- Lactose intolerance: Common; may need lactose-free options
Nutritional Support
- Vitamin B12: Supplement if ileum is diseased or removed
- Iron: For anemia, may need IV iron
- Vitamin D and calcium: For bone health
- Zinc, magnesium, folate: May be depleted
🏥 Living with Crohn's Disease
Monitoring
- Regular follow-up appointments
- Blood tests for inflammation and medication monitoring
- Fecal calprotectin to detect subclinical inflammation
- Periodic colonoscopy or imaging
- Cancer surveillance after 8-10 years of colonic disease
Smoking Cessation
Smoking significantly worsens Crohn's disease, increasing flares, surgery risk, and post-surgical recurrence. Quitting smoking is one of the most important things you can do.
Mental Health
Anxiety and depression are common in Crohn's patients. Support options include:
- Psychological counseling
- Support groups
- Mind-body therapies
- Open communication with care team
Pregnancy Planning
Most women with Crohn's can have healthy pregnancies. Best outcomes occur when conception happens during remission. Most medications are safe during pregnancy. Work with both gastroenterologist and obstetrician.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Currently, there is no cure for Crohn's disease. However, many patients achieve long-term remission with treatment. Even after surgery, the disease can return. Research into new treatments and potential cures is ongoing.
There is a genetic component. If a first-degree relative has Crohn's, your risk is 5-10 times higher than the general population. However, most people with Crohn's have no family history, and most relatives of Crohn's patients do not develop the disease.
Yes. With proper treatment, many people with Crohn's disease live full, active lives. They work, travel, exercise, and have families. It requires ongoing management, but should not define or limit your life goals.
About 70% of Crohn's patients will need surgery at some point in their lives. With modern biologics and early aggressive treatment, this percentage may decrease. Surgery can provide relief from complications and improve quality of life.