Once drugs for IBD take effect and the symptoms disappear, it can be tempting to stop taking the medication. However, this is not what doctors recommend. Dr. Bhattacharya told MNT:

“At this moment, we don’t have a good way of stopping medications for patients with IBD in remission. […] We don’t recommend stopping medications.”

He explained that ending treatment can have serious consequences. For instance, the symptoms might come back, and if the person restarts on the same treatments, these may not work.

“While we do have options when it comes to treatment,” he said, “those options are not limitless, and we don’t want to run through medications. There is good data to support that when […] one set of IBD medications [fails], your response to another type may be less likely.”

As Dr. Bhattacharya told MNT, a “gluten-free diet works for [people with] celiac disease and non-celiac gluten sensitivity,” but it will not benefit those with IBD.

Although, as the name suggests, IBD significantly affects the bowel, the disease can also have ramifications on many other parts of the body.

“Apart from the gastrointestinal system, which includes the mouth to the anus, IBD can have extraintestinal manifestations like affecting the skin, eyes, and joints, to name a few,” said Dr. Bhattacharya.

According to a reviewTrusted Source of extraintestinal manifestations of IBD, they “can involve nearly any organ system […] and can cause a significant challenge to physicians managing IBD patients.”

For instance, IBD can affect the musculoskeletal system, as well as the eyes, kidneys, and lungs. It may also damage the hepatopancreatobiliaryTrusted Source system, which includes the pancreas, liver, gallbladder, and bile duct.

At this time, there is no cure for IBD. However, as Dr. Bhattacharya said, “this is a work in progress.”

Researchers are working tirelessly to understand the condition better so that they can design better treatments and, perhaps one day, a cure.

This, thankfully, is a myth. “They absolutely can,” confirmed Dr. Bhattacharya. “With proper medical management and, sometimes, surgeries, IBD patients can live a completely normal life.”

“We have lawyers, doctors, sportsmen, actors, comedians, rock stars, and Presidents — Eisenhower and John F. Kennedy — who have [or had] IBD and lived more than a functional life.”

Source - Medical News Today