From 5 centres 154 patients with ulcerative colitis and a history of smoking completed a questionnaire about the temporal relationship between diagnosis of colitis and cessation of smoking. One hundred and thirty-eight of these were ex-smokers and 107 (69.5%) had stopped smoking before the diagnosis of colitis was made. Fifty-six patients (52%) developed colitis within 3 years of stopping smoking. The findings suggest that smoking exerts protective effect against the development of ulcerative colitis.
Summary. The rectal mucosa-associated flora (MAF) of patients with ulcerative colitis has been studied in 25 patients with newly diagnosed disease, 20 with relapse of existing disease, and 44 who were in remission. Patients with active disease were re-examined twice during treatment. The MAF was simpler and less dense than the microflora of faeces. Obligate anaerobes usually predominated in the MAF although the ratio of obligate anaerobes to facultative species was lower than that found in faeces. Viable counts of the total flora and of its constituent genera varied considerably between patients. Counts of the total flora, of obligate anaerobes (including bifidobacteria, eubacteria and clostridia), and facultative organisms and micro-aerobes (enterobacteria and lactobacilli) were reduced in patients with active disease compared with those with inactive disease; corresponding carriage rates were also lower. Counts and carriage rates increased during treatment and approached those found in quiescent disease. The alterations in the MAF were especially marked in patients experiencing their first attack of ulcerative colitis. The relationship between these alterations and the aetiology and pathogenesis of this disease remains unclear.
Mortality rates are not increased in IBD compared with the general population. However, older patients may be at increased risk of dying from other causes early in the disease clinical course.
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