Medications
Medications usually are the treatment of choice for
ulcerative colitis. They control or prevent
inflammation in the intestines and help:
- Relieve symptoms.
- Promote healing
of damaged tissues.
- Put the disease into
remission and keep it from flaring up
again.
- Postpone or prevent the need for surgery.
Medication Choices
The choice of medicine usually depends on the severity of the
disease, the part of the colon affected, and whether complications are
present.
- Treatment of mild to moderate ulcerative
colitis often begins with
aminosalicylates (such as sulfasalazine or
mesalamine). Aminosalicylates relieve inflammation in the intestines and help
the disease go into remission. They may also keep the disease from becoming
active again.
- Corticosteroids may be added if
symptoms continue. Corticosteroids relieve inflammation in the
intestines.
- For severe cases, stronger treatment with
medicines that suppress the immune system (such as
azathioprine [AZA], 6-mercaptopurine [6-MP], or
cyclosporine),
infliximab (Remicade), and intravenous (IV)
corticosteroids may be needed.
If you are pregnant, talk to your health professional about
which medicines are safe for you to take. Usually, aminosalicylates and
corticosteroids are safe, especially when your doctor thinks that ulcerative
colitis is more dangerous to the fetus than these medicines. Ask your doctor
whether you can take medicines that suppress the immune system. These are used
only when the benefit outweighs the potential harm to the fetus. A health
professional can recommend medicines based on the stage of the pregnancy and
the severity of your symptoms.
Several studies have shown that the nicotine patch may help treat
active ulcerative colitis. It is not yet known how long the benefits of the
nicotine patch last or if the patch can help prevent flare-ups of ulcerative
colitis. If the patch works, it most likely benefits people whose symptoms
began or became worse after quitting smoking. However, due to the addictive
power and other harmful effects of nicotine, most doctors still prefer to use
traditional medicines to treat ulcerative colitis before trying the nicotine
patch.
What To Think About
Aminosalicylates are the most common medicines used to treat
ulcerative colitis. Most of the time, these medicines are all a person needs to
keep the disease in remission (a period of time with no symptoms). When
aminosalicylates do not work, corticosteroids are most often the next medicine
tried. Corticosteroids will only be used long enough to stop the inflammation
in your colon. After the inflammation goes down, aminosalicylates will most
likely be used to maintain remission.
If aminosalicylates are not strong enough to keep you in
remission, or if corticosteroids don't work, your doctor may have you try
different medicines. These medicines include immunomodulators, cyclosporine,
and infliximab. All of these medicines control the immune response in your body
and will decrease the amount of inflammation in your intestine. The
inflammation is what causes the symptoms of ulcerative colitis.