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Common
Virus Linked With Severe Bowel Disease
The American
Journal of Gastroenterology and www.mercola.com
March 2001
A
common virus may be the cause of many hard-to-treat cases of inflammatory
bowel disease, researchers in Italy report.
More
than one third of patients in a new study who had colitis that did
not respond to steroids were infected with cytomegalovirus (CMV),
the investigators found.
A
form of inflammatory bowel disease, ulcerative colitis causes the
large intestine to become inflamed and ulcerated, leading to bloody
diarrhea, abdominal cramps and fever. Colitis can also occur in
patients with Crohn's disease, a chronic inflammation of the intestinal
wall.
More
than half of the population is infected with CMV, a type of herpesvirus.
The virus rarely causes problems in adults with healthy immune systems,
although it can cause symptoms in people with weakened immune systems,
such as those infected with HIV--the virus that causes AIDS.
Previous
reports have linked CMV infection to relapses of inflammatory bowel
disease, especially in cases that are resistant to steroids used
to treat the illness. But the rate of CMV infection among patients
with inflammatory bowel disease is uncertain.
To
see how common CMV infection is among patients with inflammatory
bowel disease, researchers studied 55 patients with ulcerative colitis
and seven with Crohn's disease. In 30% of the patients, steroid
therapy did not clear up symptoms.
To
test for CMV infection, the researchers performed rectal biopsies
in the patients whose symptoms were resistant to steroids.
CMV
was present in 36% of patients.
Dr.
Mercola's Comment:
An
interesting observation. More than one-third of those with inflammatory
bowel disease have CMV infection.
Fortunately,
we have a simple inexpensive and safe treatment for CMV---raw garlic.
The active ingredient is allicin and other thiosulphanates that
are released when fresh raw garlic is crushed. Garlic in pills does
not seem to work.
The
garlic should be used in conjunction with an absolute restriction
of all grains, especially gluten grains (wheat, barley, rye, oats,
spelt). Additionally, large amounts of probiotics are also helpful
to normalize the bowel flora. There is one specific probiotic that
uses soil based organisms, (Primal Defense) that seems to be particularly
helpful for this problem.
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