Ulcerative Colitis: When Surgery Is Needed
Topic Overview
Surgery is likely to be needed for
ulcerative colitis
when:
- Medicines and nutritional therapy have failed to
manage severe symptoms.
-
Toxic megacolon
does not respond to medical treatment within 4 days (or sooner in some cases).
- Holes develop in the large intestine
(perforation).
- You have colon cancer, a significantly increased
risk of cancer (detected by
biopsies
), or a narrowing in the intestine that cannot
be distinguished from cancer, even if you do not have symptoms of active
disease.
- Severe, disabling complications occur outside the colon.
But many complications do not respond to surgery.
- Severe bleeding
requires ongoing blood transfusions.
- Slow growth or other serious
complications occur in children.
People may choose to have surgery to improve their quality of
life, cure ulcerative colitis, or prevent the possibility of colon
cancer.
Credits
|
By
| Healthwise Staff |
|
Primary Medical Reviewer
| E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine |
|
Specialist Medical Reviewer
| Peter J. Kahrilas, MD - Gastroenterology |
|
Last Revised
| October 8, 2012 |
Last Revised:
October 8, 2012