With Diabetes you have to monitor it ALL the time, but with Crohns you may have unexpected diarrhea several times a day. Whichever concerns you most.
No, Crohns is not caused by Diabetes. A study in 2007 suggested a link between the two because both are autoimmune diseases but geneticists who found the gene linking Crohns and type 1 diabetes found it to be insignificant. The overall increase in risk of disease conferred by the various genetic risk factors was between 1.2 and 1.5 times, suggesting routine testing is not worthwhile.
Absolutely yes it can. Left untreated Crohns can be life threatening. Even when diagnosed and under a physicians care, a severe flare up can become uncontrollable and require hospitalization.
The Crohns diet is a low residue diet. More information aboyt this diet is available at: www.webmd.com/...crohns.../crohns.../creating-a-crohns-disease-die...
If you have diabetes you shouldn't be eating any sweets that are made of sugar, banana, potato and no alcohol
There is no decisive answer to this question. The answer would depend on which of these diseases you have been diagnosed with. The disease you suffer from, be it IBD or Crohns would always be far worse than one you do not experience.
Not necessarily. Each patient is different and the severity of the symptoms can vary a great deal. While Crohns is never cured, remissions (times when the disease is not active) can last for years. Flare's can come and go suddenly, or they can get worse as they go on until hospitalization is the only course of action. There is no way to predict this as each patients disease progresses on its own course.
pregnancy with anaemia isworse
crohns disease crohns disease
maybe its polyuria(a symptom of diabetes)
People who have diabetes mellitus (diabetes II) should see their dentist more often--at least twice a year for cleaning. Tell your dentist about your diabetes and discuss your oral health care plan. Poor oral health can make your diabetes worse.
yes. ppl with diabetes have higher levels of anger, as well as other negative emotions, than the general population. those with a co-existing mental health diagnosis feel worse than those with MH diagnoses but do not have diabetes. it's also worse for older ppl.