smoking and MC
Moderators: Rosie, Stanz, Jean, CAMary, moremuscle, JFR, Dee, xet, Peggy, Matthew, Gabes-Apg, grannyh, Gloria, Mars, starfire, Polly, Joefnh
smoking and MC
Is there any relation to smoking and MC? Like smoking helps keep inflammation down for people with ulcerative colitis but smoking makes crohns disease worse.
I do see that some of you have quit smoking and that is awesome. I want to quit really soon (I am down from a pack a day to 3 a day and boy was that hard... now I look forward to when I get up, after I eat lunch and after I finish work as those are my smoke times).
Anyways did any of your diseases start when you quit smoking? Does quitting make the symptoms worse?
Thanks guys
Andrew
I do see that some of you have quit smoking and that is awesome. I want to quit really soon (I am down from a pack a day to 3 a day and boy was that hard... now I look forward to when I get up, after I eat lunch and after I finish work as those are my smoke times).
Anyways did any of your diseases start when you quit smoking? Does quitting make the symptoms worse?
Thanks guys
Andrew
Dr Fine test shows positive for gluten and casien but negative for soy, eggs, and yeast
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Andrew,
I don't think that we've found any correlation between smoking and MC. I admit I smoke and I allowed myself to continue while I was changing my diet. There were times that it seemed like there was nothing I could eat and a cigarette filled the gap. It's been two years and I'm thinking about quitting again, probably when I start back to work.
I am in NO WAY trying to discourage you from quitting, but you may want to consider your timing. We can only do so much and our chance of success goes down as the amount of stress in our lives goes up... Just a thought.
Love, Jean
I don't think that we've found any correlation between smoking and MC. I admit I smoke and I allowed myself to continue while I was changing my diet. There were times that it seemed like there was nothing I could eat and a cigarette filled the gap. It's been two years and I'm thinking about quitting again, probably when I start back to work.
I am in NO WAY trying to discourage you from quitting, but you may want to consider your timing. We can only do so much and our chance of success goes down as the amount of stress in our lives goes up... Just a thought.
Love, Jean
Be kind to everyone, because you never know what battles they are fighting.
Hey, you asked a good question. I developed full blown MC about 3/4 months after I quit smoking. I can't say I'm sorry I quit, and I don't know if I would or wouldn't have gotten MC anyway, but if I had a choice between one or the other, I'd choose smoking. LOL
Love, Shirley
Love, Shirley
When the eagles are silent, the parrots begin to jabber"
-- Winston Churchill
-- Winston Churchill
-
- King Penguin
- Posts: 3859
- Joined: Fri May 13, 2011 5:56 pm
Hi Andrew.....I quit just over a year ago, I picked a week that my husband was on a business trip and went cold turkey.....My advise is that if you truly want to quit....go to your doctor and have him/her help you with whatever meds you need to quit.
The reason I say this is....I did it on my own...I went into depression, sleepless ness and just plain bad company. I cried when I saw a walmart bad being blown across the yar in the 5o mph winds we were having. Things like that. So I called my doctor 5 days into the "quit" and she gave me an RX for a seditive.
I feel 100% better than I did. I taste better and I don't have the daily cough I had. I for one will be here for words of incouragement if you decide to quit.
I believe that all we do, eating smoking drinking all of it effects MC.I am no doctor but That's what I believe. I know my skin is softer since I quit. Love Oma
The reason I say this is....I did it on my own...I went into depression, sleepless ness and just plain bad company. I cried when I saw a walmart bad being blown across the yar in the 5o mph winds we were having. Things like that. So I called my doctor 5 days into the "quit" and she gave me an RX for a seditive.
I feel 100% better than I did. I taste better and I don't have the daily cough I had. I for one will be here for words of incouragement if you decide to quit.
I believe that all we do, eating smoking drinking all of it effects MC.I am no doctor but That's what I believe. I know my skin is softer since I quit. Love Oma
May I be more compassionate and loving than yeterday*and be able to spot the idiots in advance
-
- King Penguin
- Posts: 3859
- Joined: Fri May 13, 2011 5:56 pm
Here's some info:
http://www.crohns.org.uk/Docs/4/uc/Smok ... litis.html
http://www.docguide.com/news/content.ns ... EA006FC3CF
http://www.dyraki.com/uc.htm
Basically just type in "smoking colitis" on a web search and you'll come up with tons of information.
Peg
http://www.crohns.org.uk/Docs/4/uc/Smok ... litis.html
http://www.docguide.com/news/content.ns ... EA006FC3CF
http://www.dyraki.com/uc.htm
Basically just type in "smoking colitis" on a web search and you'll come up with tons of information.
Peg
Andrew,
As has already been mentioned, there are many documented cases of MC, where the onset of the disease was attributed to the cessation of a long term smoking habit. I'm not sure that resuming smoking can put MC into remission, but stoping smoking can definitely trigger the disease.
Regarding the relationship that smoking has with UC and Crohn's, be aware that even though MC is an Inflammatory Bowel Disease, (IBD), which puts it in the same family as UC and Crohn's, MC has never been documented to segue into either UC or Crohn's. It may be possible that MC and either UC or Crohn's can coexist in a patient, independently, but if this is even possitble, I believe it would be extremely rare.
LC can, of course change into CC, and vice versa, or either one can change into a form known as just plain MC, which has the markers of both diseases, at seemingly random times. Since the symptoms and the treatment are the same for any form of MC, however, any sequencing is pretty much irrelevant, from a patients viewpoint, and is only of interest from an academic, or medical viewpoint.
Here is a reference that suggests that smoking may be protective of MC, (based on the observation that 23% of the patients in the study were former smokers):
http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic1351.htm
Unfortunately, this same reference, (which is an old site, but has been recently updated), still makes this claim: "The coincidence of celiac sprue and LC raises the possibility of a luminal agent being responsible for the colitis; however, removal of gluten from the diet is ineffective in treating the colitis.", which is contradictory to the personal experience of many members of this board.
Keep in mind that even though UC, Colitis, and MC, are all IBDs, they are all unique diseases, with their own individual characteristics, and even though many, (but not all), treatments which work for one, seem to provide benefits for the others, also, each disease has it's own preferred treatment program.
I hope this helps to shed a little light on the topic,
Wayne
As has already been mentioned, there are many documented cases of MC, where the onset of the disease was attributed to the cessation of a long term smoking habit. I'm not sure that resuming smoking can put MC into remission, but stoping smoking can definitely trigger the disease.
Regarding the relationship that smoking has with UC and Crohn's, be aware that even though MC is an Inflammatory Bowel Disease, (IBD), which puts it in the same family as UC and Crohn's, MC has never been documented to segue into either UC or Crohn's. It may be possible that MC and either UC or Crohn's can coexist in a patient, independently, but if this is even possitble, I believe it would be extremely rare.
LC can, of course change into CC, and vice versa, or either one can change into a form known as just plain MC, which has the markers of both diseases, at seemingly random times. Since the symptoms and the treatment are the same for any form of MC, however, any sequencing is pretty much irrelevant, from a patients viewpoint, and is only of interest from an academic, or medical viewpoint.
Here is a reference that suggests that smoking may be protective of MC, (based on the observation that 23% of the patients in the study were former smokers):
http://www.emedicine.com/med/topic1351.htm
Unfortunately, this same reference, (which is an old site, but has been recently updated), still makes this claim: "The coincidence of celiac sprue and LC raises the possibility of a luminal agent being responsible for the colitis; however, removal of gluten from the diet is ineffective in treating the colitis.", which is contradictory to the personal experience of many members of this board.
Keep in mind that even though UC, Colitis, and MC, are all IBDs, they are all unique diseases, with their own individual characteristics, and even though many, (but not all), treatments which work for one, seem to provide benefits for the others, also, each disease has it's own preferred treatment program.
I hope this helps to shed a little light on the topic,
Wayne
It is suspected that some of the hardest material known to science can be found in the skulls of GI specialists who insist that diet has nothing to do with the treatment of microscopic colitis.
Hi Andrew,
I am a smoker and find it stressful to even think about quitting! I am very impressed by the fact that you have cut down so far on your smoking. I am afraid that quitting would cause me more harm than good at this point, stress wise and would bring back the MC full force.
My GI also mentioned some time ago something about smoking and MC. I'll have to ask the details my next visit.
Good luck in your quitting! I admire your courage!
Mars
I am a smoker and find it stressful to even think about quitting! I am very impressed by the fact that you have cut down so far on your smoking. I am afraid that quitting would cause me more harm than good at this point, stress wise and would bring back the MC full force.
My GI also mentioned some time ago something about smoking and MC. I'll have to ask the details my next visit.
Good luck in your quitting! I admire your courage!
Mars
"Let us rise up and be thankful, for if we didn't learn a lot today, at least we learned a little, and if we didn't learn a little, at least we didn't get sick, and if we got sick, at least we didn't die; so, let us all be thankful." -- Buddha
Just as I suspected... now I dont want to quit! But i hope with a gluten free diet or whatever it will cause the flare not to be so bad?
Dr Fine test shows positive for gluten and casien but negative for soy, eggs, and yeast
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Hey Andrew,
I'm inspired by your aspiration to quit! I stopped smoking many years ago, but I beleive my good twenty years of smoking caused considerable damage. Not to mention being around second hand smoke my entire childhood.
I now have elevated levels of cadmium (a heavy metal) which is in cigarettes (amoung a host of other things). High levels of cadmium in the body have been connected with prostate cancer, osteoporosis, and a number of other diseases. Not to freak you out, but these are some of the facts I've learned about in trying to heal my illness.
Good luck!
Celia
I'm inspired by your aspiration to quit! I stopped smoking many years ago, but I beleive my good twenty years of smoking caused considerable damage. Not to mention being around second hand smoke my entire childhood.
I now have elevated levels of cadmium (a heavy metal) which is in cigarettes (amoung a host of other things). High levels of cadmium in the body have been connected with prostate cancer, osteoporosis, and a number of other diseases. Not to freak you out, but these are some of the facts I've learned about in trying to heal my illness.
Good luck!
Celia
I beleive in magic!
Herb Lady and Celia-
Did you find that your MC got worse when you quit?
I wonder what meds that I am on now have glute in them? I take Entocort, Asacol, Compazine, Ativan, and Wellbutrin... is there a site I can go and check on meds that do/dont have gluten in them?
Did you find that your MC got worse when you quit?
I wonder what meds that I am on now have glute in them? I take Entocort, Asacol, Compazine, Ativan, and Wellbutrin... is there a site I can go and check on meds that do/dont have gluten in them?
Dr Fine test shows positive for gluten and casien but negative for soy, eggs, and yeast
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Do you guys think that if Dr Fine's tests come back with intollerances and I make the diet changes that are needed; and then quit smoking once I am better for about 6 months, that I will not experience a flare or maybe it will be milder?
Dr Fine test shows positive for gluten and casien but negative for soy, eggs, and yeast
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!
Maybe its UC maybe its MC? Who knows at this point, but at least I know my intollerances now... so heres to the road to healing!