“…Driman and Preiksaitis demonstrated that oral sodium phosphate solutions can produce a variety of mild pathological findings in the colon, including aphthoid lesions/erosions, focal active colitis, and mildly increased crypt epithelial apoptosis [57]. When Goldstein and Cinenza described NSAID-related colitis, they described similar changes, including patchy, mild inflammation, often with neutrophils, and increased intraepithelial lymphocytes; eosinophils and crypt epithelial apoptosis were also prominent [58]. Importantly, the diffuse crypt architectural distortion of ulcerative colitis (UC) and granulomas of Crohn disease are lacking.…”