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Many different medications can be used to treat Colitis. Doctors will prescribe Anti-Inflammatory drugs, along with Immune System Suppressors, and sometimes just the common antibiotic.
Yes, a high protein and low residue diet is good for colitis
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The anabolic steroid Winstrol is most often used for cutting cycles, because it helps to reduce SHBG, it helps in the area for sexual problems. It is argued that, it is not a very good way to use in the treatment of anaemia.
An anabolic steroid is a class of steroid hormones which promote the growth of tissue.
Anabloic Steroids are drugs used by pathtic athletes who have to cheat to be good.
There are many plans out there designed to help those with colitis. WebMD offers an in-depth look at what one's diet should comprise of at their website URL: http://www.webmd.com/ibd-crohns-disease/ulcerative-colitis/creating-an-ulcerative-colitis-plan.
Doctors prescribe steroids for anti-inflammatory reasons and to help boost your natural immunities. So it may be for inflammation and to help fight off infection.
Whether a recipe is good or bad is primarily based upon the opinions of each individual. Purchasing a recipe book would be a good source in obtaining recipes for improving ulcerative colitis.
webmd.com is a good reputable source for medical information: http://www.webmd.com/search/search_results/default.aspx?query=colitis&sourceType=undefined
There IS no steroid that will give low side effects. You shouldn't be on steroids in the first place.
The NSAID's (advil, aleve) are the first line of treatment in dealing with inflammation. If those don't do the trick, the next step would be a steroid to decrease the inflammatory response. If still nothing, a more powerful drug such as methotrexate (for rheumatoid arthritis, not osteoarthritis) would need to be prescribed.