How Crohn's Disease Affects People Who Suffer From It
Crohn’s Disease is a difficult disorder for those that suffer from it, both physically and ....
| Comments on article "How Crohn's Disease Affects People Who Suffer From It" |
| Name |
Views and Comments | Date |
| mich |
thanks for the info it was very intresting it gave me a lot to think about and hope fully i can find a way to help thouse who need it. thanks |
11/13/2009 |
| Vivian M |
This article is nice and simple for my family to understand much easier than I can attempt to educate them. |
10/23/2009 |
| liz and jess |
thank you for this you helped me and my mate understand a bit more about what crohns disease is and it also helped us with our health and social work as our parents have this and i and she didnt understand what he was trying to tell us
thank yo again |
11/25/2008 |
| Perry Pe |
Ooops, forgot to include my contact info. For any possible antidote to this dreadful poison(figure of speech), please send in your reply to: perrpe at yahoo dot com(just use the proper spelling, and please include this e-amil address to your whitelist for quick and reasonable response. Thank you. |
4/14/2007 |
| Perry Pe |
Have you heard of the fruit "mangosteen"? All I can share to you at this time are the reliable links(most qualified and educational), would be to send me a message(just found out that I can not include a link on this post). They're informative about the power of the strongest antioxidant "xanthones". And if you are on the technical side, then visit, pubmed.org and type in xanthones or mangosteen on the search bar. Hope you can incorporate the poison with the antidote. Enjoy Sarah and thank you for the post. |
4/14/2007 |
| michelle |
my mom have that disease and i wanted to know if i can get more information about thank you |
9/15/2006 |
| Anne Ireland |
All of the articles by Sarah Jenkins on Crohn's Disease were well written and very helpful.
I do have a question of where I can find more information about the relationship between stress and Crohn's. While it is clear that stress doesn't cause Crohn's, there is a corrolation between stress and future "flare ups" of the disease. Beyond any stress due to the psychological impact of having a chronic disease, several of Ms. Jenkins' articles reference that stress reduction is important to on-going health.
Specifically, have studies shown that stress (caused by moving, divorce, death in the family, etc. -- not stress of having the disease) triggers recurances, or flare ups, of Crohn's?
Please advise me where to find such studies. Thank you. heyfayssoux@earthlink.net |
7/27/2006 | |
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