Crohn's disease is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease that can affect any part of the GI tract from mouth to anus, causing abdominal pain, diarrhea, and malnutrition. Skip lesions and transmural inflammation are pathological hallmarks.
Gastrointestinal and hepatic conditions generate complications through mucosal barrier dysfunction, impaired nutrient absorption, portal hypertension, altered motility, and systemic effects of hepatic failure. Liver cirrhosis exemplifies the multi-system complication burden: portal hypertension causes variceal bleeding, ascites, and hepatorenal syndrome; liver synthetic failure impairs coagulation; portosystemic encephalopathy affects consciousness. Inflammatory bowel disease carries complications from bowel wall inflammation, malabsorption, extraintestinal manifestations, and immunosuppressive therapy.
Immediate clinical action required
The following signs may indicate a new or worsening complication requiring prompt clinical evaluation:
Treatment & Management
Evidence-based treatment pathway, medications, and escalation criteria
Prognosis & Outlook
Long-term clinical outlook, improving and worsening outcome factors
Differential Diagnosis
Conditions that mimic Crohn's Disease — distinguishing features & tests
Crohn's Disease Overview
Symptoms, causes, and general condition overview
These conditions share overlapping symptoms with Crohn's Disease but have distinct complication patterns — understanding the differences is clinically important.
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